Category: Trump

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: Mullin to CNN: We’re laser focused on delivering President Trump’s agenda

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator MarkWayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma)

    ICYMI: Mullin to CNN: We’re laser focused on delivering President Trump’s agenda

    “The American people elected President Trump in November, and they put Republicans in charge.”
    Washington, D.C. – On Wednesday, U.S. Senator Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) joined CNN’s The Source with Kaitlan Collins to push back against the baseless attacks against President Trump’s ‘One, Big, Beautiful Bill.’ The senator additionally underscored how the president’s ‘Peace through Strength’ agenda is making Americans safe at home and ending forever wars abroad. Highlights below.

    Sen. Mullin’s full interview can be found here.
    On Elon Musk, standing with the Trump Administration and the MAGA agenda:
    “I love my wife dearly and we still have differences sometimes, so I can have a lot of respect for someone and still have differences and everybody is welcome to their opinion, but the fact is, we’re gonna pass one big beautiful bill, we’re gonna get 51 in the Senate and we’re gonna make sure that it’s not a killer bill that the House can’t pass either and so the House is gonna deliver their votes and we’re gonna put it on the president’s desk for the American people…
    “We’re laser focused on delivering President Trump’s agenda. The American people elected President Trump in November, and they put Republicans in charge, and this is one step towards multiple promises that the president made by making the tax provisions permanent, by making sure were cutting deficit spending, and were getting rid of the waste and fraud.”
    On the importance of President Trump’s recent travel ban:
    “There are some real travel concerns because of some activities going in that place. I don’t think the Boulder incident had anything to do with this moving forward because this conversation has been going on for weeks. The President takes keeping the American people safe, it’s extremely important to him. He talks about it all the time. And so, I know that he takes foreign policy seriously. He’s not one to do anything that he feels he cannot negotiate deals with individuals. This is a well thought out, not a hurried idea. This is something that he felt like was in America’s best interest for national security interest.”
    On working with the president on a sanctions package against Russia:
    “We’re working with the President of the United States, and he has done a phenomenal job on our foreign affairs and we don’t want to get ahead of the White House, we want to work with the President and we wanna make sure this is a leverage point that he can use for Putin, but Russia knows that we are very serious about moving forward with this…
    “President Trump has been very clear, he wants to end all the killing. Period. If Putin is not negotiating in good faith, which I think you saw the President get upset with him just a week ago, if the President gets to the point he doesn’t think Putin is operating in good faith, then we will immediately move forward and it will pass. We know it will pass both chambers and will get to the President’s desk, but we can’t get ahead of the President.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Innovation and Market Structure: Keynote Address by Acting Chairman Caroline D. Pham, Piper Sandler Global Exchange and Trading Conference 2025

    Source: US Commodity Futures Trading Commission

    Thank you for the invitation to speak at the Piper Sandler Global Exchange and Trading Conference.[1]  I’m honored to be asked to provide the keynote address here today during a time of rapid innovation and transformation of market structure—both in new products and new markets.
    When I became acting Chairman this year, I said we have to get back to basics. For the past half century, the CFTC has proudly served our mission to promote market integrity and liquidity in U.S. derivatives markets—markets that are critical to the real economy and global trade—ensuring American farmers, producers, merchants and other commercial end-users can mitigate risks to their business and support strong U.S. economic growth.  You—this audience in this room—are the leaders of those markets who ensure that they are deep, liquid, and well-functioning each and every day.  Our markets work best because there is a partnership between the regulator and our self-regulatory organizations (SROs): National Futures Association (NFA) and CFTC-registered designated contract markets (DCMs), derivatives clearing organizations (DCOs), and swap execution facilities (SEFs) for the derivatives markets, and Financial Industry Regulatory Association (FINRA) and SEC-registered national securities exchanges and clearing agencies.
    Today, I will discuss how the CFTC is promoting regulatory policy that supports U.S. economic growth and American competition, and approaching innovation and market structure.  First, I will highlight the CFTC’s regulatory agenda that was submitted pursuant to the President’s executive orders.  Next, I will discuss the work of our operating divisions and questions about the self-certification process for new or changed contracts or rules. Finally, I will share some observations on the CFTC’s recent requests for comment on 24/7 trading and perpetual derivatives, and direct access and non-intermediated clearing.
    Unified Regulatory Agenda 
    I am pleased to announce the CFTC has submitted its 2025 Spring Unified Regulatory Agenda and will highlight a few items.  In accordance with Executive Order 13771, Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs,[2] I have identified the following rulemaking initiatives to provide regulatory certainty, eliminate unnecessary cost burdens, and unleash a golden age for markets:

    Improving the SEF “Made Available to Trade” (MAT) process for swaps

    Expanding access to markets for insured depository institutions by broadening the scope of products excluded from the swap dealer de minimis threshold calculation 

    Expanding access to markets by no longer requiring associated person registration for personnel of introducing brokers that only refer swaps to a wholly owned affiliate de minimis dealer

    Codifying foreign exchange product interpretation that window FX forwards and package spot FX transactions are not FX swaps 

    Codifying no-action relief from both the pre-trade mid-market mark disclosure requirement and certain documentation requirements for cleared swaps and prime brokerage transactions for swap dealers 

    Codifying no-action relief from the clearing requirement for legacy swaps resulting from multilateral portfolio compression exercises 

    Codifying no-action relief from ownership and control reporting under Parts 17, 18, and 20 of CFTC regulations

    Codifying no-action relief for DCMs and DCOs from duplicative reporting of fully collateralized binary options to swap data repositories (SDRs) under Parts 43 and 45 of CFTC regulations 

    Sunsetting duplicative and burdensome Part 20 large trader reporting obligations for physical commodity swaps, as required under Regulation 20.9 

    Eliminating the burdensome and costly cotton-on-call reporting requirements and related CFTC Cotton-on-Call Report

    These items have been longstanding issues regarding CFTC regulatory overreach and administrative burden, some for over a decade.
    New or Amended Product and Rule Submissions
    I want to commend CFTC staff in the Division of Market Oversight (DMO) and Division of Clearing and Risk (DCR) for the day-to-day work that supports growth and innovation in our markets.  Under my leadership in my first 100 days as acting Chairman (even without a majority on the Commission), and the leadership of acting DMO Director Rahul Varma, acting DCR Director Richard Haynes, and former acting DMO Director Amanda Olear, our hard working and dedicated DMO and DCR staff have engaged in the following activities, in addition to performing examinations and ongoing monitoring:
    DMO

    670 new products filed by exchanges

    43 product filings submitted by foreign boards of trade (FBOTs) 

    315 rule filings submitted by exchanges (211 market rules, 104 product related rules)

    Issued 3 certification letters to FBOTs under Regulation 30.13

    DCR

    This is a snapshot of our dynamic and vibrant derivatives markets, which serve the national public interest mandated in our statute by providing price risk mitigation, price discovery, and price dissemination.[3] 
    These day-to-day activities are in addition to the over 20 CFTC staff letters and other guidance, issued in just four months, to provide regulatory clarity and reduce regulatory burden.  DMO and DCR were involved in over half of those, and I want to commend the Market Participants Division (MPD) staff for all of their tremendous efforts as well.  This level of productivity from CFTC staff has not been seen since the first Trump Administration.
    Self-Certification Process for Exchanges and Clearinghouses
    As I have said before, our system of self-regulation works because our SROs take their role seriously in upholding the CFTC’s regulatory framework and ensuring market integrity.[4]  Self-regulation is effective when it is cooperative.  I commend DCMs, SEFs, DCOs, and SDRs (registered entities) that recognize and support the efforts of our DMO and DCR staff, and I urge these registered entities to do their best to assist staff and make the review process as efficient as possible.
    But even more important is that our registered entities must be committed to the rule of law, the public interest, and doing what’s right.  As you know, the CFTC has a principles-based regulatory framework that is designed to provide maximum autonomy and flexibility to our exchanges and clearinghouses.  This enables exchanges to launch self-certified new contracts and issue new rules one business day after submission to the CFTC.  In fact, the CFTC cannot stay or halt trading of a self-certified contract,[5] or suspend or revoke the registration of an exchange or clearinghouse,[6] without conducting an adjudicatory hearing—an in-house trial before the Commission as an administrative tribunal exercising our quasi-judicial authority.  In our entire history, the CFTC has never done so.  And we cannot force compliance with the law and CFTC regulations without obtaining a court order in litigation, whether by an enforcement action or otherwise.
    In the past, registered entities have ignored and failed to comply with Commission orders with impunity[7]—presumably because they know that the CFTC has much more limited authority to take action against exchanges and clearinghouses, in contrast to our authority over registered futures commission merchants (FCMs) and other intermediaries.
    That means that the self-certification process is built on trust, and it is bad for our markets, for market participants, and for the American people when this trust is broken.  For the CFTC’s hands-off self-certification process to work, registered entities must commit to operate in a “no surprises” environment and work through issues in partnership with CFTC staff.  On our part, the CFTC must commit to engaging in good faith with registered entities and be transparent about our processes. Nobody should be playing games.
    Part 40 regulations
    I will provide some background in response to questions that have been raised about the CFTC’s self-certification process.  Part 40 was established pursuant to the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 and has been in place since 2001.  Part 40 created a new framework for the certification and approval of new products, rules, and rule amendments that are submitted to the CFTC by registered entities such as DCMs, SEFs, DCOs, and SDRs.  It was again amended in 2011 pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act.  The Part 40 Proposal preamble states that Part 40 “govern[s] how registered entities submit self-certifications, and requests for approval, of their rules, rule amendments, and new products for trading and clearing, as well as the CFTC’s review and processing of such submissions.”[8]
    As I have noted before, the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA or Act) mandates that the Commission serve the public interest through our oversight of “a system of effective self-regulation of trading facilities, clearing systems, market participants and market professionals.” Part 40 is the cornerstone of effective self-regulation in our derivatives markets because it sets forth the standards for listing new contracts and issuing or amending rules for registered entities, including those that are SROs and have rulebooks that are enforceable against SRO members.  The penalties for violating SRO rules can be severe, including fines, suspension, or revocation of membership.[9]
    Stay of self-certification or extension of review period
    For example, regarding new products, under Regulation 40.2 the Commission can stay the self-certification of a new product only in circumstances involving a false certification, or a petition to alter or amend the contract terms and conditions pursuant to Section 8a(7) of the CEA.  The self-certification process does not involve Commission approval.  However, under Regulation 40.3, new products can be submitted to the Commission for review and approval, and the review period can be extended if the product raises novel or complex issues.[10]
    Similarly, regarding new rules or rule amendments submitted under Regulation 40.5 for Commission review and approval, the Commission can extend the review period for (1) novel or complex issues, (2) major economic significance, (3) incomplete submissions, and (4) not responding completely to CFTC questions in a timely manner.  And under Regulation 40.6, the Commission can stay the self-certification of new rule or rule amendment filings involving (1) novel or complex issues, (2) inadequate explanation, or (3) potential inconsistency with the CEA or CFTC regulations.[11]
    These checks and balances are integral to the CFTC’s oversight of registered entities, and I support DMO and DCR staff’s use of all these provisions to extend or stay the review period if any of these criteria have been met—especially if there are, as applicable, incomplete submissions, inadequate explanation, or for not responding completely to CFTC questions in a timely manner.  As I said two years ago, registered entities must ensure that they dot their i’s and cross their t’s, and show their work, when submitting product or rule filings.[12]
    Non-approval of new products or new rule or rule amendments
    I want to emphasize that the existing Part 40 regulations provide for Commission non-approval of new products, or new rule or rule amendments, only if submitted for review under Regulation 40.3 or 40.5, respectively.  Obviously, a product or rule will not be approved if it violates or is inconsistent, respectively, with the CEA or CFTC regulations.  The Commission can determine that “it will not, or is unable to approve” the product or rule, including for form and content requirements for submission, because the product “violates, appears to violate or potentially violates but which cannot be ascertained from the submission,” or the rule or rule amendment “is inconsistent or appears to be inconsistent” with the CEA and CFTC regulations.[13]
    These standards and criteria under Regulations 40.3 or 40.5 grant the Commission and CFTC staff considerable discretion in conducting reviews of product and rule filings for approval or non-approval. Again, I support the Commission issuing a notice of non-approval if any of these criteria have been met. 
    However, the Commission’s approval process does not apply to self-certified product or rule filings.  If an exchange or clearinghouse ignores a Commission order or notice of non-approval, the Commission cannot enforce compliance without either conducting an in-house trial or going to federal court to obtain a court order.[14]
    Requests for Public Comment on Innovation and Market Structure
    There is a line, often not very bright, between what is “business as usual” done in a new way and a truly different and innovative market practice.  The CFTC’s current regulations for DCMs and DCOs are very flexible—they allow for expansion into new ways of trading and clearing without major regulatory changes, but this is coupled with the need to use that flexibility responsibly.  Because our regulations are flexible, the CFTC is typically not focused on writing new regulations.  Instead, the CFTC is focused on how current regulations should best apply to actual proposals that have been submitted to us in a few innovative, but complex, areas.  To inform and assist the CFTC with its regulatory approach to innovation and market structure, we want to make sure to gather, and consider, the expertise and wisdom of the marketplace through requests for public comment. 
    24/7 Trading
    Many of the main issues raised by 24/7 trading and clearing that will need to be addressed are already clear.  No changes to CFTC regulations are necessary to enable 24/7 trading, which recently went live on Coinbase Derivatives (a DCM) and Nodal Clear (a DCO) in May 2025.  CFTC staff appreciate the firms that engaged with us for over a year to work through these issues, in a great example of the partnership in our markets.
    Nonetheless, because of the broader implications for market structure, the CFTC issued a request for comment in April 2025 on the uses, benefits, and risks of derivatives trading and clearing on a 24/7 (or almost 24/7) basis.[15]  That comment period recently closed and CFTC staff are currently evaluating the many helpful responses. 
    Collateral exchange
    To an extent, derivatives are already trading during low activity time periods and positions are already being held over weekends absent collateral exchange, so a more comprehensive move to 24/7 trading and clearing would bring with it both known and novel characteristics.  The novelties are, in part, related to the different schedules of specific market operations.  For example, trading may be continuous, but parts of the clearing process, such as exchange of collateral, require point-in-time calculations and periodic finality while risk continues to accrue.  This risk may be mitigated where client clearing takes place through FCMs that are highly capitalized and thus central counterparties (CCPs) can accept short-term credit exposure.
    Practices must be adapted for trading over weekends where (at least for the moment) collateral exchange is not possible.  Without on-call collateral, CCPs need pre-funded collateral to address credit and related liquidity risks that arise over a weekend. This raises questions about calibrating the possible exposures, such as the appropriate “margin period of risk” (MPOR) where collateral access is lost for more than one trading day.  Related, other risks like those associated with market liquidity may be mitigated if other similar markets are also open during the weekend, emphasizing the value and need for 24/7 spot market access for a broader liquidity pool.
    Operational challenges
    Many commenters to the CFTC’s request for information make a related but much broader point—24/7 trading must be evaluated holistically due to the effects not only on trading platforms and clearing houses but also the changes that would be required of FCMs, market participants, asset managers, third-party service providers, and others to account for changes in liquidity, price transparency, collateral access, and default management during non-traditional business hours.  These commenters stress that significantly increased costs would likely be borne by all market participants, not just those that choose to trade (or intermediate) 24/7.  For example, they note that these changes in market structure may also require renegotiation and redocumentation of relationships between market participants, such as between asset managers and FCMs.
    Many commenters point out that trading on a 24/7 basis may require CCPs, exchanges, intermediaries, their third-party service providers, asset managers, and others to have staffing virtually 24/7.  It will be important to maintain focus and resources on platform maintenance while markets are open, including dealing with unplanned outages, patch management, live change deployments, and rollback mechanisms, though some commenters suggested that some of these difficulties could be mitigated by having a maintenance window each day (such as 24/6 or 24/5 trading instead of true 24/7 trading).
    Market conditions, liquidity risk, and credit risk
    Concerns have been raised that low volume periods during weekends will cause diminished liquidity, wider spreads, increased volatility, and reduced price transparency, raising risk coverage questions similar to those noted above.  CFTC staff will need to address whether, on a product-by-product basis, other markets (cash markets, repo markets) will be available to make derivative pricing practicable.  In sum, there are concerns that risk management will be significantly challenged when high volatility and low liquidity paired with limited collateral asset mobility leads to increased defaults during a period when there may be limited ability of FCMs and CCPs to close-out positions or hedge associated risks.
    Solutions to these issues are always informed by anticipated benefits and costs of paths ahead.  The liquidity and credit risk concerns noted above drive the need for additional collateral or other measures to protect against weekend market moves, and a need to reduce or mitigate the effects of auto or manual liquidations.  This, of course, comes at a cost; posting excess margin, potentially at multiple exchanges, may have a negative impact on the efficient use of capital by market participants.  Moreover, some commenters expressed fears that, in times of high volatility, additional costs could rise to the fore.  For instance, elevated volatility could erode posted collateral to such an extent that positions may be unexpectedly auto-liquidated, leaving end-users without critical hedges.
    One view to consider, if sufficient data allows, would be to limit trading to only specified contracts that have sufficient customer demand for weekend trading to help ensure liquidity and appropriate pricing.  A number of commenters suggested that some products would be more appropriate for weekend trading than others.  I have previously noted the value of having already existing spot markets that trade 24/7, broadening the liquidity pool over the weekend period.  Consistent with this view, the proposals that the CFTC staff have seen so far have only focused on crypto asset products, where spot markets exist with continuous trading and sufficient depth of liquidity.  The CFTC is not aware of any plans to offer 24/7 trading beyond the crypto asset class at this time.
    For more traditional commodities, like agricultural commodities, liquidity and pricing concerns would likely need much deeper review, since the listing of contracts with limited open interest or trading volume for weekend trading may distort pricing and increase the risk of liquidations over the weekend—a fear expressed by many commentors who rely on the ability to maintain carefully constructed portfolios to achieve success in their trading strategies.
    CFTC staff are starting to get some informative data on market innovation towards more continuous trading hours.  Last month, 24/7 trading started on Coinbase Derivatives for a few crypto asset derivatives contracts, where the spot market is already open 24/7.  These first few weeks of trading have provided a useful window into the level of interest and viability.  In the last few weeks, weekend trading has been averaging over a thousand individual traders, across volumes that fall in the hundreds of thousands of lots, similar to an average (or even somewhat active weekday).  So, it may be the case that for markets already used to 24/7 trading, the extension to futures is less unbridgeable than it may be for other contracts.
    While there is a natural tendency to focus on the risks created by 24/7 trading, CFTC staff is also aware that weekend trading may allow for more real-time risk-reducing trades in response to unexpected events. These events—whether geopolitical, weather-related, or otherwise—can happen over the weekend, and forcing market participants to wait until Sunday afternoon in the U.S. to deal with them creates risks of its own.  That is why it is imperative to consider the benefits of market innovation, and not to only focus on the downsides.
    Other regulatory changes that CFTC staff may consider to address clearing member credit risk might allow for the use of tokenized assets such as non-cash collateral[16] or stablecoins, or other forms of margin that are not dependent on banks being open.
    Other considerations
    On the regulatory side, CFTC staff is also aware of other open questions such as existing definitions, like CFTC regulations that reference a “business day” that does not include weekends and holidays.  In addressing these cases, we would need to identify ways to both maintain the regulatory status quo for non-continuous markets and find flexible but effective procedures for 24/7 markets.
    Perpetual Derivatives
    A key trend in derivatives markets is an increase in retail trading.  In addition to the exponential growth in non-intermediated direct access retail trading and clearing, markets are keen to launch new retail-focused products.
    There has been much confusion about perpetual derivatives in CFTC-regulated markets.  Contrary to public reports, perpetual derivatives have already been trading in our markets for several months.  In April 2025, Bitnomial Perpetual Bitcoin USD Centi Futures went live and started trading. 
    Since the beginning of this year, a number of DCMs have self-certified the listing of perpetual derivatives.  (Again, under the CFTC’s self-certification process, no Commission approval is needed.)  CFTC staff appreciates the ongoing and active engagement with exchanges seeking to self-certify perpetual derivatives and their assistance in responding to questions and providing information.  To benefit from public input, CFTC staff also issued a request for comment on the potential uses, benefits, and risks of trading and clearing of perpetual derivatives contracts in CFTC-regulated markets (Perpetuals RFC).[17]  That comment period recently closed and CFTC staff are currently evaluating the many helpful responses.
    Comments in response to the Perpetuals RFC included a variety of viewpoints, reflecting the complexity of introducing a very different product type into markets that remain conceptually organized around intermediated, margined trading in physical delivery commodities. Nonetheless, the comments received reflect several themes that may be helpful in organizing market and regulatory perspectives going forward.
    A number of commenters were supportive of perpetual derivatives in the context of crypto asset markets.  They noted that perpetuals provide a continuous, lower cost spot-like exposure that does not need to roll out of an expiring futures contract to retain a position.  Commenters also noted potential advantages to bringing crypto asset perpetual derivatives to the U.S. market and under the U.S. regulatory umbrella.
    At the same time, several commenters raised concerns around the suitability of perpetual derivatives involving traditional physical commodities.  They expressed concern about a potential lack of convergence with the physical market given the absence of expiration, potentially making perpetuals ineffective for hedging longer term price risk.  Some thus see perpetuals as inconsistent with the risk management and price discovery function of futures markets.  Some commenters also argue that perpetual derivatives may present increased risk relative to traditional futures, including increased volatility, funding rates, leverage risk, and heightened potential for manipulation.
    Basis risk
    As a spot-market substitute, there is the usual risk management question around basis risk:  perpetual prices vs. spot prices, perpetual prices vs. futures prices. Many major market events in the last few decades involved mismanagement of basis risk, often due to liquidity differences leading to divergence.  Basis risk can rapidly increase when liquidity providers are different across two similar products or when the balance of buyers and sellers are significantly different across two similar products.  Accordingly, CFTC staff are interested in how the participant mix for perpetuals will be similar or different from that for related spot or traditional futures, especially if one market is dominated by institutional investors and the other dominated by retail.  Will we see a “tail wagging the dog” phenomenon, with retail investors driving the price movements of institutional positions?
    What the CFTC usually sees in traditional futures markets is that there is balance between institutional hedgers and institutional speculators in a primary market, with related retail markets (i.e., mini and micro futures) much smaller than the institutional market.  What happens in a case where the retail contract (perpetuals) becomes much larger than the related institutional product (traditional futures)?  Should there be concern that this may harm traditional roles of risk transfer and price discovery?
    Direct Access and Non-Intermediated Clearing
    Many of these same issues may also apply to non-intermediation in derivatives markets—providing direct access to market participants (particularly to retail traders) and clearing by CCPs of such direct access customers’ positions in individual accounts.
    In intermediated markets, FCMs clear customer positions as DCO clearing members and guarantee their customers’ positions to the DCO.  Those DCOs build trust in their clearing members by setting and monitoring membership requirements, including capital requirements that match capital to risk, and requiring the review of their members’ risk management procedures.  This trust is enhanced because clearing members protect not only their own and their customers’ positions but also, through mutualization, provide a backstop for the positions of all other clearing members—a defense-in-depth approach that has served the U.S. derivatives markets almost flawlessly for decades.
    FCMs clearing for their customers provide a check on the appropriate setting of margin by CCPs through their own risk management processes.  FCMs know their customers, their businesses, and their resources, and will often call for additional margin from specific customers based on their independent credit risk assessments.
    In a case where a CCP has thousands of direct participants, many of them retail, this detailed knowledge and associated trust is much more challenging.  As a result, all presently operating direct clearing retail DCOs are clearing only fully collateralized contracts where there is no need to accept credit exposure (or to call for additional collateral).
    Auto-liquidation and tear-ups
    CFTC staff are now being asked to consider whether this low trust/no trust model can be extended to a leveraged world where risk management will need to look very different.  In a world like this, the “heartbeat” of CCP risk management will likely need to match that same cadence in trading, at least implying the need for real-time posting of collateral—a “pay in cash, not in credit” model.  When the cash is insufficient—for example, when a customer’s margin has eroded below maintenance margin level as the market moves against them—the account will need to be closed, leading at first to a rules-based liquidation process.
    Unfortunately, this process to protect the CCP from individual participants may, in certain severe circumstances, harm the system as a whole.  Some commenters pointed out the possibility that auto-liquidations in volatile or illiquid weekend markets could be procyclical, leading to additional liquidations, and broader market instability.  These feedback effects may be especially pronounced during times of extraordinary stress, when liquidation is paired with unusually low available liquidity.
    A number of questions are yet to be answered for risk management in a leveraged, direct model:  What should the default waterfall look like in a direct access world? Should the risk of one retail trader be mutualized by other retail traders?  If not, are there other resources that can play the role of the traditional mutualized resource tranche?  What is the equivalent of the key “Cover 2” requirement in a world of direct access retail trading, where a CCP’s clearing members number in the thousands rather than the dozens?  How does one define “extreme but plausible” in such a world?  Many fundamental principles need to be re-analyzed where the credit risk and capital structure of clearing members is much different than today’s intermediated model.
    If traditional protections like prefunded mutualization are not feasible, or feasible only to a reduced extent, then it appears CCPs may need to shift more quickly to other default solutions like “variation margin gains haircutting” (VMGH) and tear-ups.  This might leave markets to grapple with a situation where solvent market participants may not get money they are expecting or find that they don’t hold the positions that are expecting.
    While these tools are already baked into the rules of most existing CCPs, they’ve not been used during this century.  If they are invoked at one direct-access CCP, what would that do to market confidence at other CCPs?  All of which leads to the most important question—can these markets still reliably play a role for hedgers who need position continuity? Will the value of futures markets be fundamentally changed, and not for the better?
    Technology innovation
    Given the pace of innovation, it’s clear that direct clearing models will also be impacted by impending changes, like 24/7 trading and clearing.  CFTC staff are now contemplating whether 24/7 trading and a direct clearing model where collateral needs to be exchanged in real time is even possible without the creation and adoption of new forms of collateral, like tokenization, which are not limited by banking hours.
    Here, CFTC staff think operational resiliency will be essential because market downtime will result in the loss of the needed real-time exchange of collateral.  There will also need to be an extensive customer engagement and education process to deal with large numbers of relatively small traders, paired with robust surveillance and operational and volatility controls to handle potentially highly disruptive activities like gamification, meme-ification, and other digital engagement practices likely to follow on to thousands of retail participants in these markets.
    Customer protection
    On the regulatory side, CFTC staff are tasked with determining where, in non-intermediated markets, the crucial obligations traditionally handled by intermediaries will be fulfilled.  I proposed last year that a captive FCM model would achieve the direct clearing market structure for DCMs/DCOs while preserving the important regulatory obligations that intermediaries perform, such as the laborious task of creating and disseminating risk disclosures, trade confirmations, and monthly account statements, complying with AML/KYC obligations, and of course, the bedrock of customer protections: segregation of customer funds, limited investments, acknowledgements from depositories, and daily seg reporting.[18]  Because a CCP is already an SRO, it does not make sense for it to be a member of an SRO such as NFA, FINRA, or similar organization, which are designed to be member organizations for intermediaries such as FCMs or broker-dealers and their personnel.
    Partnership and Trust
    I would like to share a message from CFTC staff to those seeking to innovate or significantly improve the traditional way of operating a market or CCP: 
    We are open to ideas, open to changes that will help the processes of price discovery and risk management.  But, please, engage the CFTC early in the development of novel and innovative products and market operations.  Too often, the CFTC is brought into the conversation long after crucial decisions have been made and resources expended, only to face regulatory obstacles that could have been avoided.  Self-certification should be the end of a dialogue with the CFTC, not the beginning.  Come talk to us.  Get a preliminary view before you commit to a particular course of action.  We are here not as an opponent or enemy, but as a sounding-board, someone who can help identify how innovations can be made consistent with our regulations or point to open questions that need to be answered.
    The CFTC staff have the expertise and knowledge to assist in identifying the challenges of innovations like the ones I have discussed. CFTC staff can help, often even at early stages, noting requirements that need to be accounted for in product and operational designs.
    Most importantly: Help us, help you.  CFTC staff are happy to discuss and provide preliminary views.  But this is often most helpful when innovators come to these discussions prepared, having reviewed CFTC regulatory requirements with knowledgeable professionals and thus ready to offer helpful solutions or alternatives.  Have answers to the questions you know we’ll ask. Consider and develop your trading, clearing, product, staffing, system, and operational plans early in the process. Engage with all relevant CFTC offices and divisions.  Don’t surprise us—don’t wait until the last minute to approach us before submitting an application, product, or rule filing.
    Conclusion
    Let me conclude by saying that the innovation and market structure that I have discussed appears to be just the beginning.  The pace is likely to increase in the coming years. We can only imagine the future of the derivatives markets and the business processes used in today’s trading and clearing systems.  That’s why it is critical that the CFTC must engage in smart regulation that is balanced with input from all stakeholders.  I believe that we can work cooperatively with both new entrants and traditional markets to incorporate innovation while maintaining market integrity.
    Markets operated smoothly throughout the recent volatility and all-time high volumes, and that’s a testament to the strength of U.S. capital markets and our regulatory framework that has been in place for almost a hundred years.  Since the 1930s, both derivatives and securities markets have gone through many transformative changes, from open outcry trading in the pits, to all-electronic trading on screens in fractions of a second.  Each transformation has resulted in the continuing dominance of U.S. capital markets and American innovation.  I look forward to seeing what’s next as we transform our markets again to create greater efficiencies and drive prosperity for American businesses and the American people.

    [1] I would like to thank Frank Fisanich, Richard Haynes, Sebastian Pujol Scott, Tom Smith, Rahul Varna, and Bob Wasserman for their contributions and assistance.

    [3] Section 3(a) of the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA), 7 U.S.C. § 5(a).

    [5] 17 C.F.R. § 40.2.

    [6] CEA section 5e, 7 U.S.C. § 7b.

    [7] This does not refer to situations involving litigation where Commission actions have been contested.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Pulsed field ablation devices face growth challenges as US tariffs disrupt cardiovascular market, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Pulsed field ablation devices face growth challenges as US tariffs disrupt cardiovascular market, says GlobalData

    Posted in Medical Devices

    The US cardiovascular devices market is facing growing challenges as President Trump’s tariffs disrupt global supply chains and worsen international relations. Particularly, pulsed field ablation (PFA) devices, often manufactured abroad for cost, efficiency, and material access, are now subject to higher tariffs. This disruption could slow the significant growth seen in the sector in recent years, with hospitals and manufacturers facing rising costs, delays, and uncertainty, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    The electrophysiology market has been growing at a record pace in the past few years, mainly due to the innovation and efficacy in new devices. In the past year alone, PFA devices have rapidly displaced every other advanced electrophysiology system.

    Boston Scientific’s FARAPULSE, Medtronic’s PulseSelect, and Johnson & Johnson’s VARIPULSE have all had success in the market, with improved clinical outcomes, shorter procedure times, and better safety for patients. Boston Scientific and Medtronic have both indicated high financial growth in their cardiovascular divisions, with PFA systems being a large part of this growth for both companies.

    David Beauchamp, Medical Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Trump’s tariffs, however, could reduce this high growth. The US remains the largest market for cardiovascular devices, and PFA is currently only available in a handful of countries due to regulatory approval. If these tariffs do end up staying on medical devices, major PFA manufacturers will have to absorb the costs of tariffs or raise the already high prices for these devices.”

    GlobalData estimates the US PFA market to be worth $535.9 million in 2024. The market is set to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 31.65% from 2024 to 2034. However, this growth rate may slow down as tariffs begin to create cost increases in the medical device supply chain.

    Beauchamp concludes: “It is possible that the American tariffs on other countries could result in a reduction of growth in medical device markets, especially in the cardiovascular sector, where many components are sourced outside of the US. With the continuing uncertainty of these tariffs, it remains to be seen what the effects will be on the medical device industry. In very high-growth markets, including the PFA market, supply chain disruption and manufacturing cost increases may result in healthcare providers preferring other, cheaper options, which could result in possible slowdown for the growth of PFA systems.”

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Lois Frankel Warns Trump’s Foreign Aid Cuts Are Dangerous and Self-Defeating

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lois Frankel (FL-21)

    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Representative Lois Frankel (FL-22) issued the following statement in response to President Trump’s proposal to drastically slash international affairs funding—endangering Americans’ safety, economic security, and global standing:

    “President Trump’s extreme plan to gut diplomacy and foreign assistance isn’t fiscal responsibility—it’s reckless and short-sighted. It will raise costs for American families, fuel global instability, and weaken our leadership in the world. Foreign assistance—less than one percent of our federal budget—prevents deadly diseases from reaching our shores, creates markets for American businesses, and helps keep our troops out of costly conflicts by addressing the root causes of violence and extremism. Meanwhile, China and other adversaries are ready to step in and fill the void we would leave behind.

    Instead of rubber-stamping these dangerous cuts, Congress must work in a bipartisan, responsible way to pass a budget that reflects our values, protects our national interests, and strengthens our global leadership,”  said Rep. Frankel.

    Rep. Frankel is a senior member of the House Appropriations Committee and serves as Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs, which oversees funding for the State Department and foreign assistance.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pressley Slams Trump for Corruption, Bribery in Crypto Schemes

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07)

    “Under Trump, the SEC isn’t protecting anyone. It’s not regulating. Its cases are being dictated by whoever is paying the president tens of millions of dollars’ worth of crypto bribes.”

    “If this isn’t the definition of corruption, then what is?”

    Video (YouTube)

    WASHINGTON – In a House Financial Services Committee hearing, Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07) slammed Donald Trump over his corrupt crypto venture for personal financial gain and his indirect and improper acceptance of bribes from companies being sued by the SEC who have later had their charges dropped.

    The Congresswoman laid out how Trump’s moves are a clear abuse of power over the SEC and blatantly enrich himself and his allies at the expense of everyday American investors.

    A transcript of the Congresswoman’s remarks, as delivered, is available below, and the full video is available here.

    Transcript: Pressley Slams Trump for Corruption, Bribery in Crypto Schemes

    House Financial Services Committee

    June 4, 2025

    REP. PRESSLEY: Now in normal times, a U.S. president trafficking in corruption would be condemned by both Republicans and Democrats. In normal times, the appearance of bribery – even the hint of it – would be universally denounced. 

    But these are not normal times. 

    In fact, in this season of reverse Robin Hood culture, these are the worst of times.

    The Trump family is engaging in mind-boggling levels of corruption – so blatant, so numerous, that we’re overwhelmed and can’t keep up, which is, in fact, the strategy.

    Today I want to shed light on, specifically, the crypto bribery scheme happening in plain sight. 

    Now, Trump launched World Liberty Financial, a crypto platform where 75% of revenues go straight to the Trump family’s pockets. This has become a pay-to-play corruption game. 

    Trump has – Occupant Trump has – zero interest in lowering costs for working families but remains vigilant in his efforts to enrich himself. 

    Now, further evidence of this pay-to-play corruption game.

    Player one is Justin Sun. In 2023, the SEC sued him and his companies for defrauding investors, manipulating token prices, and secretly paying celebrities to promote tokens without disclosing payments. All of that is illegal.

    But after Sun purchased $75 million worth of Trump’s tokens, he was appointed as an advisor to World Liberty Financial and, magically, Trump’s SEC dropped their case against him. 

    Maybe that’s just a coincidence. But it sure does look like crypto-bribery. 

    Then there’s Binance. The company’s founder, Changpeng Zhao, or CZ, was convicted for failing to prevent terrorists, child abusers, and cybercriminals from using his crypto-exchange. Binance paid a $4 billion fine and the SEC also sued Binance for running an unlicensed exchange. 

    Now that would have been a slam dunk case. 

    One Binance executive literally messaged another: quote, ‘We are operating as a f—ing unlicensed securities exchange in the USA, bro’ end quote.

    I must say, the constituency of ‘bros’ are certainly living their best life in Donald Trump’s America. But I digress. 

    But yet again, that case magically disappeared after a $2 billion investment in Binance using Trump’s stable coin. And we’re supposed to think that this is just a coincidence. 

    So let me ask a very simple question. I promise you, this is not a ‘gotcha’ question. This is straightforward. So, I’m looking for a straightforward answer. 

    Should companies be able to bribe the President of the United States to make SEC lawsuits go away? Yes or no?

    And we’ll begin with Mr. Massad and work back. 

    MR. TIMOTHY MASSAD: Absolutely not. 

    MS. KATHERINE MINARIK: No. Bribery is a crime. 

    MR. ROSTIN BEHNAM: No.

    MR. VIVEK RAMAN: No.

    MR. ELAD ROISMAN: I’m not here to talk about –

    REP. PRESSLEY: Let me just – let me say the question again, sir. Again, there’s no gotcha here. This is very straightforward. 

    MR. ELAD ROISMAN: Okay.

    REP. PRESSLEY: Should companies be able to bribe the President of the United States to make SEC lawsuits go away? Yes or no? 

    MR. ELAD ROISMAN: I don’t think anyone should bribe anyone to make lawsuits go away. 

    REP. PRESSLEY: Yes or no? 

    MR. ELAD ROISMAN: That’s my answer, ma’am.

    REP. PRESSLEY: Yes or no? 

    MR. ELAD ROISMAN: I think I just answered it.

    REP. PRESSLEY: Under Trump, the SEC isn’t protecting anyone. It’s not regulating. Its cases are being dictated by whoever is paying the president tens of millions of dollars’ worth of crypto bribes.

    And who pays the price? It’s not the billionaires or the foreign actors cutting deals behind closed doors. It’s the average Americans who use crypto for legitimate reasons, like remittances, who are left unprotected in a rigged system. 

    And to be clear, these crypto scams are not simply about Trump and his billionaire friends making money. 

    It’s even worse than that. 

    It’s about them stealing money from everyone else. 

    If this isn’t the definition of corruption, then what is?

    I yield back.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Operation Patriot Results in Numerous Arrests of Criminal Illegal Aliens with Detainers that Were Ignored Due to Sanctuary Policies

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    Nearly 1,500 illegal aliens were arrested in sanctuary Massachusetts including rapists, kidnappers, and other violent criminals

    WASHINGTON – Today, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) published further details about the success of Operation Patriot in Massachusetts. DHS is highlighting some of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens who were arrested and then released into Massachusetts (MA) communities because of sanctuary policies.

    “Under President Trump and Secretary Noem’s leadership, ICE arrested nearly 1,500 illegal aliens in sanctuary Massachusetts during a month-long operation” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin. “Outrageously, many of these criminal illegal aliens—including rapists, kidnappers, and other violent criminals were arrested and RELEASED by local authorities because of sanctuary policies. These policies make Americans less safe.”

    Below are a few of the worst of the worst arrests made during the month-long surge by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) all of whom had previous ICE detainers which were ignored by local authorities.

    Marcelino De Leon Yoc

    ICE Boston arrested Marcelino De Leon Yoc, a 32-year-old illegal alien from Guatemala and a registered sex offender who has pending criminal charges in Boston, MA for five counts of indecent assault and battery on a person 14 or older. He was arrested in Roxbury, MA for aggravated rape of child with a 10-year age gap and indecent assault and battery of a person 14 or older. Two ICE detainers were not honored—one from the Suffolk Superior Court in Boston, MA and another one from Nashua Street Jail in Boston, MA. He is pending removal and will remain in ICE custody.

    John Tobon Vargas

    ICE Boston arrested John Tobon Vargas, a 22-year-old illegal alien from Colombia. Previously, on February 14, 2025, the Boston, MA Municipal Court in Roxbury, MA arraigned him on charges of felony breaking and entering, kidnapping, aggravated rape, and indecent assault and battery on a person 14 or older. The Boston Municipal Court released him without notifying ICE, despite an immigration detainer being in place. He is pending removal proceedings and will remain in ICE custody.

    Kebler Lasso

    ICE Boston also arrested Kebler Lasso, an illegal alien from Ecuador. On July 24, 2018, he was convicted for soliciting to commit murder and was sentenced to one year in jail. He was released by the Brockton District Court in MA and placed on GPS without honoring the immigration detainer in place. On May 5, 2025, ERO Boston arrested him in Brockton, MA.

    Denis Javier Aguirre Murillo

    ICE Boston arrested Denis Javier Aguirre Murillo, a 37-year-old illegal alien from Honduras, whose most recent arrest in Fall River, MA was for rape, indecent assault and battery on person 14 or older, witness intimidation, and kidnapping a minor by relative. He has a conviction in Boston, MA for illegal re-entry. He also has several other arrests in MA including lewd and lascivious conduct, sexual conduct for fee, and multiple convictions for operating a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol. Furthermore, he has a conviction for operating while intoxicated in Iowa and served one year prison. On February 19, 2025, the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office did not honor his ICE detainer, and he was released. 

    Luciano Pereira De Oliveira

    ICE Boston arrested Luciano Pereira De Oliveira, a 29-year-old illegal alien from Brazil, pending charges in Edgartown, MA for aggravated rape of a child with force, possession child pornography, and dissemination of obscene material. He has another arrest in Edgartown, MA for assault and battery of family and kidnapping. On July 28, 2024, an ICE detainer was lodged, but the Edgartown District Court in MA did not honor the detainer and released him. He was arrested as part of Operation Patriot and will be processed for expedited removal.

    Jose Wilfredo Lopez-Martin

    ICE Boston arrested 40-year-old Jose Wilfredo Lopez-Martin, an illegal alien from Guatemala, who has been charged with for the following: assault and battery with a dangerous weapon – hammer, threatening to commit crime, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon – vehicle, assault and battery of family, strangulation/suffocation, and intimidation of a witness. On October 16, 2024, the Lynn District Court in MA released him and did not honor the ICE detainer. 

    Graviel Nolasco

    ICE Boston arrested Graviel Nolasco, a 52-year-old illegal alien from Guatemala, at large in Lynn, MA. On an unknown date and location, he entered the U.S. without admission or parole. He has been removed from the U.S. on four prior occasions. He has a conviction in Peabody, MA for operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol and malicious destruction of property. He has 15 total adult arraignments in Lynn, MA, for crimes such as assault and battery on a household (3x), strangulation/suffocation, intimidation of witness, Abuse Prevention Act, and assault and battery with a dangerous weapon. The Lynn District Court in MA released him on January 7, 2025, and did not honor the immigration detainer. He will remain in ICE custody pending referral to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for prosecution for re-entry after deportation. 

    Senat Dufren

    ICE Boston arrested Senat Dufren, 33, an illegal alien from Haiti, in Waltham, MA. He was previously arrested in Roxbury, MA for assault and battery and malicious destruction of property, and ICE subsequently lodged an immigration detainer with the Nashua Street Jail in Boston, MA. On April 3, 2024, he was released, and the detainer was not honored. He was then arrested again on February 19, 2025, in Waltham, MA for assault and battery, assault and battery on a pregnant victim, and assault and battery of a family/household.

    Jose Luis Ledezma

    ICE Boston arrested Jose Luis Ledezma, an illegal alien from Ecuador, who had been previously removed from the U.S. and has pending criminal charges in Barnstable, MA for operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol, leaving scene with person injured, and operating a vehicle with  suspended license. He had another arrest in Barnstable for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon – hammer. On March 21, 2025, an ICE detainer was lodged with Barnstable County House of Corrections, but it was not honored, and he was later released. He will be prosecuted for illegal entry. 

    Jefferson Adrian Patin Quinaloa

    ICE Boston arrested Jefferson Adrian Patin Quinaloa, a 21-year-old illegal alien from Ecuador, who has convictions for operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol and operating negligently, as well as pending charges for aggravated assault and battery – serious bodily injury, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, and assault to rob. On February 20, 2024, the Brighton District Court in MA released him and did not honor the ICE detainer. On May 5, 2023, the Plymouth Superior Court in MA released him and did not honor the ICE detainer. He is now in ICE custody.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: NEWS: Sanders, 39 Senators Fight Trump’s Cuts to the Job Corps Program

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Vermont – Bernie Sanders
    WASHINGTON, June 6 – After the Trump administration attempted to shutter the nation’s largest jobs training program for low-income and at-risk young people, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Ranking Member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee, and 39 Senate colleagues, today sent a letter to Department of Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer urging her to reverse the illegal and unconstitutional cuts to the Job Corps program that are harming students and communities in every state in the country. 
    “The Administration’s decision to illegally and abruptly terminate Job Corps center operations has left 25,000 students and thousands of staff across 99 Job Corps centers in the lurch,” wrote Sanders and the senators. “The sudden ‘pause’ of operations at Job Corps centers puts young people’s lives at risk, especially a significant number of students who were experiencing homelessness before arriving to the program. Local communities will pay a steep price, especially the thousands of individuals who work at the centers and will lose their livelihoods.” 
    For more than 60 years, Job Corps has helped millions of young people in rural communities and cities alike to finish high school, learn technical skills and get good-paying jobs while providing stable housing, medical and mental health care, and other supportive services. Through Job Corps programs, young people receive the training they need to start in good-paying jobs that support their communities after graduation – including as wildland firefighters, nurses, electricians, machinists, pipefitters, and welders. Last month, however, the Trump administration indefinitely ‘paused’ operations at Job Corps sites across the country. 
    “We urge you to immediately reverse this decision to prevent a lapse in education and services for Job Corps students. We further urge that the Department restart enrollments, expeditiously restart background checks, and make any contract extensions or modifications necessary to ensure no interruptions or delays for students or program operations,” concluded Sanders and the senators. 
    Joining Sanders on the letter are Sens. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.), Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Chris Coons (D-Del.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.), Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), Ben Ray Lujan (D-N.M.), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), Angus King (I-Maine), Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Jack Reed (D-R.I.), Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Gary Peters (D-Mich.), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) and Patty Murray (D-Wash.). 
    Read the letter here. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Republican Study Committee Launches Rescissions Task Force, Rep. Moore to Serve as Chair

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Riley Moore (WV-02)

    Washington, D.C. – Today, the Republican Study Committee (RSC) launched the Rescissions Working Group, a team of RSC Members who will serve as the tip of the spear for House conservative’s efforts to codify President Trump’s $9.4 billion rescissions package. Chaired by Congressman Riley Moore (R-WV), the task force will also work to educate members and staff about the rescissions process & the President’s impoundment authority, as well as make the case for additional rescissions packages to be sent to Congress.

    The RSC has long supported the use of rescissions to rein in out of control spending, formally endorsing President Trump’s first rescissions package when it was sent to Congress in 2017. Recognizing the need to honor the commitment we made to the American people to eliminate woke, wasteful, and weaponized spending, the RSC has decided to accelerate our efforts by establishing the Rescissions Working Group.

    The committee is grateful to former RSC Chair and current House Majority Leader Steve Scalise for leading the effort to shepherd the rescissions package through the House, and our Rescissions Working Group stands prepared to support the Majority Leader in his determined efforts to get this package over the finish line.

    “I’m thrilled to be chairing this task force for RSC and thank Chairman Pfluger for his support,” said Congressman Moore. “President Trump was given a historic mandate by the American people to restore common sense and end waste, fraud, and abuse. This rescission package is a key first step in codifying necessary cuts, and I look forward to working with my colleagues and the White House as we continue to deliver for the American people.”

    “The RSC’s Rescissions Working Group is the first of its kind, and signals to the American people that House conservatives are ready to meet the moment and assist President Trump in delivering on his historic mandate,” said RSC Chairman August Pfluger (TX-11). “The rescissions package sent to Congress serves as a critical opportunity for Congress to take immediate and decisive action to slash federal spending, and our Working Group will fight to make the case that this and future packages must pass.”

    Watch Rep. Riley Moore highlight the importance and timeliness of this RSC Rescissions Working Group

    WHAT THEY’RE SAYING:

    Heritage Action: “The Republican Study Committee’s Rescissions Task Force will play a vital role to ensure the President’s mandate is enacted and corrupt government spending is cut. Heritage Action fully supports eliminating $9.4 billion in woke and wasteful spending from the likes of USAID, NPR and PBS. The time for fiscal sanity is now, and we look forward to working with this Task Force to ensure these rescissions are passed and signed into law. Heritage Action applauds RSC Chairman August Pfluger and Rescissions Task Force Chairman Riley Moore for their leadership.”

    Citizens for Renewing America: “Citizens for Renewing America applauds RSC’s launch of this Recissions Taskforce to ensure that the $9.4 billion recission package is passed in full. It is imperative that the entire rescissions package, just sent to Congress by the White House, passes. If Congress fails to pass the rescissions package we lose our ability to rescind those funds later. The eyes of America are on Congress to see if, as a whole, they are serious about addressing the deficit and debt problem endangering the future for our children and grandchildren.”

    Brent Gardner, Chief Government Affairs Officer at Americans for Prosperity: “Our nation’s debt crisis wasn’t created overnight, and it will take more than one bill to solve this problem. We’re grateful to the President for proposing a first wave of commonsense cost-cutting measures, and we hope to see Congress approve them soon. It’s reassuring that RSC is standing up a Rescissions Working Group to address spending and taking a holistic approach to adopt a new culture of cost-cutting in Washington.”

    David McIntosh, President of Club for Growth: “With the national debt now at $37 trillion, it’s critical that lawmakers use every available tool to reduce wasteful government spending and rescissions are a commonsense step in that effort. Club for Growth applauds the leadership of the Republican Study Committee and Rep. Riley Moore, and we encourage all conservatives to support this important initiative.”

    BACKGROUND:

    The Republican Study Committee is the oldest and largest conservative caucus in the House and represents the leading voice for conservative values in Congress. The RSC is home to over 180 strong members, fighting every single day for the American people. 

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kaptur Condemns $3.7 Billion In DOE Cuts To American Manufacturing Nationwide

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09)

    Toledo, OH – Today, Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09) Ranking Member of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development released the following statement upon the news that the Department of Energy has cancelled 24 projects nationwide, totaling $3.7 Billion in investment in American manufacturing, including a $45.1 Million investment in an Industrial Demonstration Project for Libbey Glass LLC’s Toledo, Ohio facility.

    “The abrupt termination of $3.7 Billion in clean energy investment is shortsighted and malicious. This decision will raise energy costs for American families and undermine our nation’s competitive edge. In Northwest Ohio, it endangers jobs, and undermines manufacturing in our critical glass industry, while empowering China and our global competitors,” said Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09). “Nationwide, DOE is not only raising the cost of energy in Red Districts and Blue Districts — we’re ceding ground to global competitors racing ahead in innovation and energy efficiency. This decision undercuts American innovation, discourages private-sector investment, and harms workers like the ones I represent who are counting on these projects for jobs and economic revitalization. The American people deserve leadership that meets the moment — not one that backs away from the challenge of a clean, affordable energy future. If the Trump Administration was looking to give Communist China everything they wanted, they are well on their way.”

    Below are a list of actions Ranking Member Kaptur has taken related to DOE’s frozen funding and award cancelations

     since the start of the Trump Administration:

    1. Jan. 31, 2025: Sent letter to DOE Acting Secretary regarding funding freeze
      1. Kaptur, Murray Demand Answers on Trump Administration Freezing Energy Department Investments to Lower Americans’ Energy Costs
      2. Rep. Kaptur co-led a letter with Sen. Murray.
    2. Feb. 13, 2025: Released factsheets on funding freeze impacts
      1. Kaptur, DeLauro Release Seven Fact Sheets Detailing How Trump’s Funding Freeze is Raising Energy Prices and Undermining Energy Dominance
      2. Seven factsheets were released which detail how the funding freeze impacts each state for the programs listed below.
        1. Home energy rebate program
        2. Electric grid programs
        3. Hydrogen hubs program
        4. Battery manufacturing programs
        5. Industrial demonstrations program
        6. Weatherization assistance program
        7. Loan program
    3. Feb. 26, 2025: Sent follow-up letter to Jan. 31 letter on funding freeze
      1. Kaptur, Murray Follow-Up, Demand Answers from Trump DOE as it Continues to Block Investments to Lower Americans’ Energy Costs
      2. Rep. Kaptur again co-led a letter with Sen. Murray to Secretary Wright..
    4. Apr. 2, 2025: Sent letter to DOE Acting Inspector General regarding award cancelations
      1. House Energy Leaders Call for Investigation into Department of Energy’s Scheme to Cancel Awards and Contracts
      2. Rep. Kaptur co-led a letter with Rep. DeLauro, Rep. Pallone, Rep. Castor, Rep. Lofgren and Rep. Ross calling for an investigation into the agency’s scheme to cancel competitively awarded contracts and potential for political targeting.
    5. May 7, 2025: Pushed Secretary Wright at Department of Energy budget hearing on funding freezes and cuts at DOE
      1. Ranking Member Kaptur Remarks at Fiscal Year 2026 US Department of Energy Budget Hearing
      2. Transcript of Ranking Member Kaptur exchange with Secretary Wright:

    RANKING MEMBER MARCY KAPTUR:

    So one of the things I have to ask about is my own district. I don’t understand why there was a project that was to be awarded to a glass company. And for some reason, it was pulled or it’s sitting somewhere over there, and it has caused all kinds of problems for the company. You’re a businessman. You would understand this if I can find the right sheet here.

    There’s so many sheets of paper. It’s called Libbey glass and they have two furnaces. I come from an industrial part of America and life there has been hell for a long time because we forgot what the defense industrial base of this country really is. And we’ve been trying to catch up, but it’s been hard.

    And oh, here it is. OK. So the department had $6 billion in DOE investments that were leveraged with $14 billion of private sector investment. And one of those companies, Libbey Glass, which gave me permission to even use their — I’m even afraid to use their name in public. They’re a great company. They’re a legacy company in our community.

    I’ll start to cry. They’re generous and they work hard. And they are to replace four regenerative furnaces with two larger hybrid electric furnaces to reduce the carbon intensity of its Toledo Ohio facility by up to 50 percent. And the department is considering canceling more than 60 percent of their industrial demonstration projects, which would be devastating to our community.

    And this is a company that never left the city. They didn’t go out into the suburbs, OK, and break more ground. They’re a responsible company. And for this award review and cancellation process, how is DOE or any part of your administration assessing which DOE projects will be canceled or continued? What criteria are you using?

    And even if DOE chooses not to cancel any of these awards, these actions are creating mass confusion. Unemployment is going up in our area, by the way, and companies have canceled almost $8 billion in energy manufacturing projects so far just this year, five times more than was canceled last year. So given your private sector background, what can you do to help me understand what is happening to this particular company in the review process? Where are they?

    SECRETARY CHRIS WRIGHT:

    Representative Kaptur, I appreciate your passion for industrial America, keeping the industries we have, bringing new industries home. We are so aligned on that. It’s one of the things I’m excited about this administration. We’ve outsourced so many of those jobs overseas. I was lucky. I grew up in suburban America and got a great education.

    I’ve had a dreamy life. I could have been born somewhere else. I could have had a very different life. I share your passion.

    RANKING MEMBER MARCY KAPTUR:

    Thank you.

    SECRETARY CHRIS WRIGHT:

    I share your passion. So I think I mentioned briefly, I walk into a department that I am very passionate about energy and all that. I want to support as many activities and projects as we can, to save American industry and grow American industry. So fully aligned on that. I think I gave the numbers before, but I walked into a thing where $100 billion had been shoveled out the door in 76 days.

    SECRETARY CHRIS WRIGHT:

    I’m responsible for that money now, either in money out the door or committed to money to go out the door. I can’t look at American taxpayers, including taxpayers in your district and say, yes, we invested $2 billion and we built a bridge to nowhere. We built something and now it’s just closed because it had no marketplace, it had nowhere to go. So let me give you a quick little summary. So the answer is we haven’t canceled any projects because we’ve been slow and careful and deliberative. We’ve developed a process. And in the next few months, we will run hundreds of projects, including those through our thing.

    And if it’s viable and it’s going to create jobs and it’s going to do these great things, we’re going to support that project. And the simple little criterion we’re looking at is legal, um, that technology, is the technology viable? Is the engineering done competently? Is there a market for the thing that’s being built?

    Is there a financial model that that co-funding is coming in together with the DOE funding, so the project can be complete? And does it add to national or economic security? It sounds like that one, if all the other things work certainly would. And it is aligned with this agenda?

    RANKING MEMBER MARCY KAPTUR:

    Mr. Secretary, thank you for that, putting that on the record, but that was already approved. You are reviewing something that was — all the appropriated money was already there. Those decisions had been made. So that is a very — this is a very strange process because that — those dollars weren’t to be spent, um, already as we work toward the ’26 budget.

    1. May 12, 2025: Released factsheet highlighting Secretary Wright’s Lies at Hearing
      1. Kaptur and DeLauro Expose Energy Secretary’s Lies

    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Kaptur Statement On Ukrainian Drone Strikes On Russian Aircraft And Military Targets

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09)

    Toledo, OH – Today, Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09), Co-Chair and Co-Founder of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus released the following statement on reporting of successful Ukrainian drone strikes operations deep into Russian territory, which hit airfields including the Belaya air base in Russia’s Irkutsk region, destroying more than 40 Russian planes deep in Russian territory.

    “For the continuing horror Russian dictator Vladimir Putin has exacted on the people and free nation of Ukraine, this multiple strike by Ukrainian drones on key Russian military air field assets is long overdue,” said Congresswoman Marcy Kaptur (OH-09). “Russia is the 3rd largest military in world. It encompasses 11 time zones and is rich in oil and minerals. Its population is more than 3 times the size of Ukraine. Nonetheless Putin covets the territory of Ukraine, the lowest income nation in Europe. Despite the odds, Ukraine’s soldiers and citizenry have nobly resisted Russia’s invasion since 2014 to regain their Liberty.”

    “This comes while Russia also is enlisting thousands of North Korean troops who are being forced to fight by their Dictator Kim Jong Un. Today as June begins, may President Trump use all his persuasive power and impose further sanctions on Russia, or work with Congress to do so. I hope that we can soon bring the warring parties to negotiate an end to this unnecessary and costly war defiling Europe and our planet,” concluded Congresswoman Kaptur.

    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Massie Introduces Bill to Audit U.S. Gold Reserves

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Thomas Massie (4th District of Kentucky)

    For Immediate Release
    Contact: massie.press@mail.house.gov
    Contact #: 202-225-3465

    Washington, D.C.- Representative Thomas Massie announces the introduction of H.R. 3795, the Gold Reserve Transparency Act of 2025, legislation requiring the Comptroller General to conduct and publicly release a full audit of gold reserves held by the United States. The Comptroller General’s audit will include gold held in “deep storage” locations such as Fort Knox, Kentucky.

    “Americans deserve transparency and accountability from the institutions that underpin our currency,” said Rep. Thomas Massie. “In February, President Trump said ‘We’re going to Fort Knox. . .to make sure the gold is there.‘ The Gold Reserve Transparency Act of 2025 will provide the full disclosure President Trump seeks and the American public deserves.”

    The Gold Reserve Transparency Act of 2025 further requires the Comptroller General to conduct subsequent audits of the nation’s gold reserves every five years. In addition, the Comptroller General is instructed to report on the sufficiency of measures currently in place to ensure the physical safety of the gold reserves, to provide a full accounting of encumbrances against the gold reserves, and to document any sales, purchases, disbursements, or receipts over the past 50 years that have affected the gold reserves.

    Rep. Massie’s legislation is cosponsored by Rep. Warren Davidson (R-OH), Rep. Addison McDowell (R-NC), and Rep. Troy Nehls (R-TX).

    The text of H.R. 3795 is available at this link. 

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Feenstra Votes to Ban Illegal Immigrants from Accessing SBA Funds

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Randy Feenstra (IA-04)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Rep. Randy Feenstra (R-Hull) voted for, and the U.S. House of Representatives passed, the American Entrepreneurs First Act, which would require proof of American citizenship to access funds from the U.S. Small Business Administration.

    “President Trump’s Small Business Administration is delivering for American small businesses by increasing access to capital, lowering costs, and reviving the entrepreneurial spirit in the United States. This support for creditworthy enterprises should be exclusively reserved for American citizens – not illegal immigrants,” said Rep. Feenstra. “It’s why I voted to protect the integrity of SBA loans and ban illegal immigrants from receiving any funds from the SBA. These dollars should only benefit hardworking American business owners, their employees, and their communities.”

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Luján, Finance Democrats Demand Committee Markup of Republican Reconciliation Bill

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-New Mexico)
    Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.), and every Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, demanded the committee Republicans schedule a markup of the Republican bill that would slash health care and clean energy tax credits to pay for handouts to corporations and the wealthy. Republicans have not held a single hearing in the Finance Committee to examine or justify the effects of their proposals, and if they bypass a committee vote, the Senate’s only public debate on the destructive, sweeping legislation will happen on the floor in a restricted time frame predetermined by Senate rules.
    “The American people deserve a chance to hear Republicans justify their economic agenda that would terminate health coverage for 16 million kids, seniors, people with disabilities, and families, while adding trillions of new debt—all to fund tax cuts for the rich and big corporations. A markup is the last opportunity for us to have that debate at the committee level,” Finance Democrats wrote in a letter to Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo, R-Idaho. “If there is no markup, the American people will have to assume Republicans either find their proposals impossible to defend under real scrutiny or lack the votes to report a bill out of the committee.”
    The most damaging policies in the reconciliation bill fall under the Finance Committee’s jurisdiction, including tax handouts costing $7 trillion, the largest Medicaid cut in history, and hundreds of billions in ACA cuts that dismantle the program. A new, independent analysis estimates that more than 51,000 people will die every year as a direct result of the health care cuts in the Republican reconciliation bill and their refusal to extend the Affordable Care Act premium tax credits.  
    “If Trump and Republicans in Congress are going to deprive millions of Americans of their health care so that millionaires and rich corporations can get massive tax cuts, it should not be done in secret backroom negotiations. It should be done in the light of day, including through a full markup in the Senate Finance Committee,” Finance Democrats concluded. 
    The text of the letter is available here. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Heinrich, Luján Slam Trump Administration for Illegally Gutting Agency Dedicated to Growing Local Businesses

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-New Mexico)
    Amid Commerce Department’s stonewalling, senators ask GAO to investigate if Trump officials violated the law or engaged in misconduct & what officials are doing with funding Congress appropriated to serve minority enterprises & create jobs
    WASHINGTON — U.S. Senators Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) and Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), a member of the Senate Commerce Committee, joined U.S. Senators Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.), and Ed Markey (D-Mass.) to slam the Trump Administration for its illegal dismantling of the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA). The senators asked the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) to investigate whether actions by Trump Commerce Department officials or others in the Administration violated Congressional directives, the extent to which they undermined MBDA’s Congressional mandate, and whether any officials have engaged in misconduct.
    “On May 2, 2025, the White House released its recommendations on discretionary funding levels for fiscal year (FY) 2026, which expressly acknowledge that the Commerce Department under Secretary Howard Lutnick has ‘fully eliminated’ the MBDA,” the senators wrote in a letter to GAO Comptroller General Gene Dodaro. “Prior to this admission, my colleagues and I repeatedly raised concerns about the Department’s efforts to dismantle the MBDA unilaterally, particularly given Secretary Lutnick’s clear testimony during his confirmation hearing stating he did not support dismantling the agency. We sent multiple letters to Secretary Lutnick and the Department seeking basic information about the current state of the MBDA. To date, the Department has failed to substantively respond to any of our requests, and it is becoming increasingly clear that Department leadership is not taking these concerns seriously.”
    The senators have raised concerns and demanded accountability and answers from the Trump Administration since the president issued his unlawful executive order. This letter follows a letter the senators wrote to Keith Sonderling, Acting Under Secretary for MBDA, demanding the Trump Administration detail its compliance with a May 13 federal court injunction ordering it to stop the illegal dismantling of the agency and reinstate its personnel and grantmaking capacities. The senators previously sent a May 1, 2025 inquiry to Sonderling to demand he promptly turn over key documents and information related to the dismantling of the MBDA and recent funding termination notices sent to all grantees by DOGE. On June 3, the senators also sent a letter to the Government Accountability Office (GAO) requesting that they investigate whether actions by Trump Commerce Department officials or others in the Administration violated congressional directives, the extent to which they undermined MBDA’s congressional mandate and whether any officials have engaged in misconduct.
    In October 2024, Heinrich led the unveiling of a new, larger office space for the New Mexico Minority Business Development Center in Albuquerque to expand support for local businesses across the state as they create the types of careers New Mexicans can build their families around. Heinrich wrote the legislative provision that established and funded the New Mexico Business Center in 2020, securing more than $2.5 million in federal resources through the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Minority Business Development Agency for its staffing and programming.
    In May, during the Senate Commerce hearing on the nomination of Paul Dabbar to be U.S. Deputy Secretary of Commerce, Luján pressed Mr. Dabbar on the dismantling of the MBDA by the Trump Administration and highlighted the successes of the MBDA. Luján championed an amendment in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to make the MBDA permanent. He also secured passage of a provision to double the funding level for the MBDA’s Rural Business Development Center Program and to expand this program’s eligibility to include all Minority-Serving Institutions, which will expand opportunities for New Mexico’s colleges and universities. Additionally, in 2021, Luján championed legislation to make permanent and expand the reach of the Minority Business Development Agency.
    The text of the letter can be found HERE and below:
    Comptroller General Dodaro:
    We write to request that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) conduct a review of the actions taken by the Trump Administration to dismantle the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA), despite Congress statutorily authorizing the agency and appropriating funding to further its mission. A robust investigation by GAO would help shed light on whether officials at the Department of Commerce (Department) or elsewhere in the Administration circumvented the directives of Congress, the extent to which the MBDA’s ability to administer its grants and combat potential fraud has been undermined, and whether any officials have engaged in misconduct.
    On May 2, 2025, the White House released its recommendations on discretionary funding levels for fiscal year (FY) 2026, which expressly acknowledge that the Commerce Department under Secretary Howard Lutnick has “fully eliminated” the MBDA. Prior to this admission, my colleagues and I repeatedly raised concerns about the Department’s efforts to dismantle the MBDA unilaterally, particularly given Secretary Lutnick’s clear testimony during his confirmation hearing stating he did not support dismantling the agency. We sent multiple letters to Secretary Lutnick and the Department seeking basic information about the current state of the MBDA. To date, the Department has failed to substantively respond to any of our requests, and it is becoming increasingly clear that Department leadership is not taking these concerns seriously.
    The MBDA was created by Executive Order in 1969. In 2021, Congress statutorily authorized the MBDA in bipartisan legislation, the Minority Business Development Act of 2021 (MBDA Act), which was enacted as part of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. In so doing, Congress directed the MBDA to, among other things, “enable the Federal Government to better serve the needs of minority business enterprises.” The bipartisan law also established a new Senate-confirmed position to lead the agency. By making the MBDA and its programs permanent, Congress made a deliberate decision to promote job creation, spur innovation, and support business owners from a variety of backgrounds.
    Last Congress, the Congress funded the MBDA pursuant to the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, which contained a $68.25 million appropriation for the “necessary expenses of the Minority Business Development Agency in fostering, promoting, and developing minority business enterprises, as authorized by law.” These investments have paid significant dividends: In FY 2024 alone, the MBDA helped the country’s more than 12 million minority businesses access over $1.5 billion in capital and create or retain approximately 23,000 jobs. That same level of funding has been appropriated through the Full-Year Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2025 (P.L. 119-4). 
    Despite Congress’s clear statutory directive, on March 14, 2025, President Trump issued an Executive Order effectively eliminating the MBDA and certain other federal entities. In so doing, the Executive Order called for the head of the MBDA to submit a report to the Office of Management and Budget within seven days “confirming full compliance with this order and explaining which components or functions of the governmental entity, if any, are statutorily required and to what extent.” In the weeks that followed, the Trump Administration has unilaterally dismantled the MBDA—terminating effectively all its staff, canceling its grant programs, and removing its signage from the Department.
    As part of these efforts, our offices reviewed a funding termination notice that was sent to an MBDA grantee by a member of Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) named Nate Cavanaugh, who was purportedly acting “Under the Authority of Keith Sonderling, Acting Undersecretary of MBDA.” In the notice, the Department claims the grant is being terminated because it “is unfortunately no longer consistent with the agency’s priorities and no longer serves the interests of the United States and the MBDA Program.” The termination notice further states that “MBDA is repurposing its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the President’s agenda.” The notice is silent about why the grants are inconsistent with the MBDA’s priorities and programs, which Congress, not the Department, set by statute. And the notice also suggests that the Department of Commerce or others in the Administration may be using funding appropriated for the MBDA for other, unrelated purposes.
    Fortunately, on May 13, 2025, a federal district court issued a Preliminary Injunction requiring the Trump Administration to reverse its actions to eliminate the MBDA, including by restoring agency employees to their status prior to the Executive Order issued on March 14, 2025. However, the Trump Administration quickly appealed this order, making clear it intends to continue pursuing its efforts to fully eliminate the MBDA notwithstanding Congress’s clear directives.
    It is essential that Congress and the public understand how the Trump Administration’s recent actions have affected the MBDA’s ability to carry out its statutory mission and obligations and to understand how funds appropriated to the MBDA are being used. Therefore, we are requesting your assistance to investigate activities that have occurred at MBDA since January 20, 2025, and report on the following:
    A detailed review of all actions taken by the Department of Commerce, including any acting leadership, to “fully eliminate” or otherwise dismantle the MBDA, including any efforts to pause or halt MBDA work functions, lower or eliminate the agency’s budget, or otherwise reduce the resources available to MBDA to complete its work.
    A detailed review of all actions taken by the any member of DOGE, including any volunteers, special government employees, contractors, or Department employees affiliated with DOGE, to “fully eliminate” or otherwise dismantle the MBDA, including any efforts to pause or halt MBDA work functions, lower or eliminate the agency’s budget, or otherwise reduce the resources available to MBDA to complete its work.
    A detailed review of actions taken by the Department of Commerce, including MBDA leadership and acting leadership, to pause, halt, or terminate any grants or funding that were administered or approved by the MBDA as of January 20, 2025. Please include information on the involvement of DOGE or DOGE-affiliated employees, including any volunteers, special government employees, and contractors, in decisions to pause, halt, or terminate MBDA grants or funding.
    A detailed review of the status of all MBDA grants, including:
    The extent to which grants have been terminated or funds continue to be disbursed;
    A description of the types of funded activities that are considered “consistent with the agency’s priorities” and that “serve the interests of the MBDA program”; and
    A detailed explanation of how the MBDA intends to repurpose its funding allocations in a new direction in furtherance of the President’s agenda, including any specific program or activity that has received or is expected to receive repurposed funding.

    A detailed review of actions taken by the Department of Commerce, including MBDA leadership and acting leadership, to reduce the MBDA’s workforce after January 20, 2025. Please include information on the involvement of DOGE or DOGE-affiliated employees, including any volunteers, special government employees, and contractors, in decisions to reduce the MBDA’s workforce.
    A detailed review of the effects of recent Department of Commerce and DOGE actions on:
    The operations of the MBDA’s statutorily created offices, how responsibilities are being allocated to any remaining staff, and the status of physical office space; and
    The ability of the agency to fulfill its statutorily required functions under the Minority Business Development Act of 2021 (Division K of the Infrastructure and Investment and Jobs Act, Pub. L. 117-58), including but not limited to:

                                                                  i.      The MBDA’s statutory responsibilities for private and public sector development;
                                                               ii.      The MBDA’s efforts to conduct research and provide outreach and educational services;
                                                             iii.      The operation of the MBDA’s Business Center Program, Rural Minority Business Center Program, and the national network of public-private partnerships;
                                                              iv.      The administration of the minority business development grants program;
                                                                v.      The functioning of the Minority Business Enterprises Advisory Council; and
                                                              vi.      The extent to which the Administration’s actions regarding MBDA are consistent with the statutory obligations under the Minority Business Development Act of 2021.
    The ability of the agency to effectively administer its current grants, detect and prevent potential fraud in its programs, and cooperate with any investigations into potential fraud or other wrongdoing. 
    A detailed review of the Commerce Department’s or MBDA’s development and implementation of plans to reorganize, restructure, or eliminate the MBDA’s work, and how these plans may affect the Administration’s ability to meet its statutory responsibilities, including a review of which “components or functions” of the MBDA the Trump Administration found to be “statutorily required and to what extent,” pursuant to President Trump’s March 14, 2025, Executive Order on “Continuing the Reduction of the Federal Bureaucracy.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: House Republicans Codify Another Set of President Trump’s Executive Orders

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

    WASHINGTON — House Republicans continue to enact President Trump’s legislative agenda and codify executive orders. Speaker Johnson released the following statement after the House passed a series of legislation this week to protect America’s small businesses.

    “This week, House Republicans codified another set of President Trump’s executive orders to protect American small businesses. The Biden-Harris Administration ignored Main Street America and instead prioritized illegal aliens and dismantled the American people’s trust in the Small Business Administration (SBA), but Republicans have fought and won support for hardworking Americans and entrepreneurs,” Speaker Johnson said. “From ending taxpayer-subsidized open borders to restoring oversight capabilities at SBA, House Republicans continue to bring common sense back to government and refocus agencies on their core missions. We will keep passing the President’s executive orders and working in lockstep with this Administration to fulfill our commitment to the American people.” 

    “For the past four years, American small business owners have been tossed aside by the Biden-Harris SBA for illegal immigrants and government bureaucrats,” House Committee on Small Business Chairman Williams said. “This week, we took a critical step in codifying President Trump’s executive orders and protecting small businesses. Thank you to my colleagues in the House Republican Conference for advancing legislation that will restore trust and accountability to the SBA and prioritize the hardworking entrepreneurs of Main Street America.”

    H.R. 2987 – Capping Excessive Awarding of SBLC Entrants (CEASE) Act

    “Small businesses deserve a reliable program that works for them, and that means keeping our community banks at the core of the system,” Rep. Bresnahan said. “President Trump and I agree, we shouldn’t be incentivizing fraud and abuse by flooding the program with risky, underregulated institutions. My legislation caps the number of non-bank SBLC licenses, ensuring taxpayer-backed guarantees are not handed out to lenders the SBA cannot properly oversee. I am proud to see my legislation passed, and I look forward to working with my Senate colleagues to send the legislation to the White House.”

    H.R. 2966 – American Entrepreneurs First Act

    “By passing my American Entrepreneurs First Act, House Republicans have, once again, come together to support common sense reforms protecting America’s hard-earned tax dollars from being lost to waste, fraud, abuse, and theft by hostile foreign actors,” Rep. Van Duyne said. “The American Entrepreneurs First Act ensures Small Business Administration funds are directed to American businesses and not accessible by individuals or businesses with foreign or undocumented ownership and verifies the age of all recipients. I urge our Senate colleagues to quickly pass this important measure, which is supported by President Trump and SBA Administrator Loeffler, as a vital verification step to confirm American tax dollars are being spent to strengthen American small businesses.”

    H.R. 2931 – Save SBA from Sanctuary Cities Act

    “By circumventing federal law and encouraging illegal immigrants to come into our communities, failed sanctuary city policies have created a growing public safety crisis,” Rep. Finstad said. “This important legislation codifies two of President Trump’s pro-business executive orders that protect SBA employees and safeguard our entrepreneurs by relocating SBA offices out of sanctuary cities. In doing so, it ensures that communities which uphold the rule of law will have access to the resources they need to better serve small business owners. I am proud that my House colleagues passed this legislation, and I look forward to supporting it through the legislative process.”

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Speaker Johnson: We Promised the American People We Would Deliver. And We Are.

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Mike Johnson (LA-04)

    WASHINGTON — This morning, Speaker Johnson joined Joe Kernen and Becky Quick on CNBC’s Squawk Box to highlight the pro-growth provisions included in the One Big Beautiful Bill which will provide jet fuel to the U.S. economy and help put the U.S. back on a sound fiscal trajectory.

    Watch Speaker Johnson on Squawk Box here

    On social media not being representative of real life:

    The American people are sort of caught up in the drama of this, but I don’t think at the end of the day, tweets and, and social media posts really determine what’s most important to the American people. I think what they’re concerned about is what we all promised on the campaign trail, what President Trump was elected to do, the mandate that we got by 77 million popular votes. And that is to make sure that the border is secure, to rebuild our military industrial base at a very difficult time. That’s the only new spending in this bill.

    The rest of it is securing historic tax cuts for the people, making the tax cuts permanent, having a pro-growth set of infusion into the economy, jet fuel of the economy, which is what this bill will provide, and at the same time, a historic level of savings for the American people. It’s a fiscally responsible product. It is the first in a series of steps to get us back on a sound fiscal trajectory. And I think, Joe, it’s a very important message for us to send to the bond markets, the stock market, investors, job creators, entrepreneurs, risk takers around the world. And here, of course, in the US economy. The Congress is serious. We have steady hands on the wheel. We’re going to address the debt problem at the same time as we are making the economy work again, and we can’t wait to get that done.

    On reducing the deficit and national debt:

    I love Rick Scott, Mike Lee and Ron Johnson. I mean, they’re good friends. We have lots of discussion about this. We are all deficit and debt hawks. We’re concerned about the fiscal trajectory of the country. The national debt is the number one national security threat, we have to address it. But here’s what I think Ron is missing in all of this is. He’d like to cut, you know, $8 trillion overnight, some huge figure like that. So would I, but we don’t have the votes to do that. And if you did that that quickly, it would actually do real harm to the US economy. So we have to do this in a step-by-step sequence.

    Look, I liken this to an aircraft carrier. Y’all have heard my analogy. I mean, we did not get in this situation overnight. The US economy is like a large vessel on the sea. You don’t turn it on a dime. It takes a mile of open ocean. But this is the largest turn on that wheel that we’ve had since I’ve been alive. I mean, this is the largest cut in spending that any legislative body on the face of the earth in all human history has ever achieved. And we did that by a long, deliberate process of getting everyone there. Remember, I have a very diverse Republican caucus. I’ve got people from very different districts across the country. They all see the same problem set with different lenses. And I’ve got to concoct 218 votes, currently 217 votes to get something across the line. So, we did that. We reached equilibrium, we achieved this massive achievement with the package.

    On the repercussions if the One Big Beautiful Bill Act isn’t signed into law:

    If we don’t get this bill passed, not only are the American people going to have the largest tax increase in US history descend upon their heads at the end of this year when all this expires, but all these other pro-growth incentives in the economy won’t happen. And small business owners and job creators and entrepreneurs will not expand their businesses. Wages won’t go up. The job participation rate will remain low, and inflation will continue to increase. We won’t have the solutions.

    But also, remember, if we don’t deliver on this and we don’t deliver a little bit on SALT relief, then we’re not going to have the house majority. And if we lose the house majority, the Democrats take over, they will impeach Donald Trump. I would forecast probably on the first few days of the new Congress, next January, January ‘27, and everything will go to chaos. So this team has to stay in power. This team has to stay working on our plan to get our fiscal trajectory back. And it all begins with the one big beautiful bill. Everybody who is criticizing this is playing with fire. We have got to deliver this product. We promised the people we would, and I think we will by July 4th.

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoyer Statement on May Jobs Report

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Steny H Hoyer (MD-05)

    WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman Steny H. Hoyer (MD-05) released the following statement today on the May jobs report: 

    “As today’s jobs report indicates, the job market grew modestly last month, with 139,000 jobs added to the economy and unemployment hovering around 4.2%. While positive, the Trump era is averaging one third the monthly job gains we experienced during the Biden Administration, a slowdown that is contributing to Americans’ concerns about our economy.

    “House Republicans passed Donald Trump’s ‘big, ugly bill,’ which will heap $2.4 trillion on to our national debt. The bill’s historic cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act will deprive 16 million Americans of their health insurance over the next decade. It will also cut food assistance for 11 million Americans. Experts also predict that the bill will increase the cost of energy for the average American family by $400 a year. Meanwhile, this extreme, partisan legislation will give trillions of dollars in tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans. This reckless spending has rattled the world’s confidence in America’s ability to pay its debts and led credit rating agencies to downgrade our AAA credit rating.

    “Trump continues to increase costs for Americans and lower growth forecasts for the U.S. economy, causing expectations of a recession to rise. The past few months make it clear that Trump intends to do the same thing to the economy that he has done with so many of his past businesses: run it straight into the ground.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hickenlooper, Colleagues Demand Trump Admin Reinstate All Fired Workers at NOAA, NWS Prior to Peak Hurricane, Wildfire Season

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator John Hickenlooper – Colorado
    Staff reductions at both agencies pose a threat to public safety, wildfire preparedness
    WASHINGTON – As the nation enters peak hurricane and wildfire season, U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper reiterated his call on the Trump administration to fully reinstate all fired federal employees at the National Weather Service (NWS) and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to protect Americans from natural disasters.
    “NWS employees and the programs they support are essential to the safety of the millions of Americans impacted by storms and disasters each year,” wrote the senators. “NWS would be unable to provide accurate and timely forecasts without sufficient staffing levels at weather forecast offices nationwide.”
    NWS maintains 122 weather forecast offices across the United States which are responsible for providing 24/7 weather monitoring and forecasts. The Department of Commerce is reportedly planning to eliminate an additional 1,000 staff from NOAA, including at NWS, in the coming weeks. These cuts, combined with current staffing constraints, could reduce the NWS workforce by 15% just months into 2025.
    The Trump administration’s decision this week to partially reinstate about 126 personnel to ‘stabilize operations’ at NWS field offices is progress – but falls short of what’s needed to keep Colorado safe.  
    Hickenlooper previously raised alarm about the Trump admin’s plans to cut funding for NOAA and Colorado-based research centers. He also called for an investigation into the mass layoffs at NOAA and its impacts on crucial services, including relaying emergency alerts in wildfires and supporting farmers’ drought mitigation efforts.
    In their letter, the senators requested answers to the following questions:
    How many of the NWS regional weather forecast offices were impacted by terminations or deferred resignations since January 20, 2025? Please provide a list of affected offices, including how many staff departed and how many remain. 
    With reports of at least one weather forecast office in Goodland, Kansas stopping 24/7 operations due to staffing shortages, how do the Department of Commerce and NOAA plan to maintain continued 24/7 operation of forecasting offices without requiring excessive overtime hours from staff? 
    With a requested budget cut of $1.311 billion for NOAA’s overall budget, and a $209 million cut for NWS procurement of weather satellites and infrastructure, how does the Department of Commerce and NOAA plan to ensure adequate staffing and preparedness in the midst of worsening storm seasons, increasing heat waves, and changing weather patterns?
    As NWS employees are critical to public safety, especially heading into hurricane season, will the Department of Commerce grant an exemption to the hiring freeze to fill these crucial positions?
    Full text of the letter available HERE and below.
    Dear Secretary Lutnick, and Acting Administrator Grimm,
    We write to express our concern with recent layoffs at the National Weather Service (NWS). Reports indicate that over 550 employees have been terminated or accepted deferred resignation offers. We believe that these staff reductions pose a threat to public safety and emergency preparedness by undercutting essential forecasting and weather monitoring systems. We urge you to reinstate terminated NWS employees and request additional information on how the administration plans to address staffing at NWS.
    NWS maintains 122 weather forecast offices across the United States which are responsible for providing 24/7 weather monitoring and forecasts. NWS would be unable to provide accurate and timely forecasts without sufficient staffing levels at weather forecast offices nationwide. In addition to daily forecasting operations, weather forecast offices are responsible for issuing emergency weather warnings ahead of events such as major floods, wildfire hazards, hurricanes, and blizzard conditions. As the frequency and severity of such disasters increase, maintaining
    NWS’s real-time forecasting operations is essential to saving lives and reducing the cost of recovery for disaster-affected communities.
    NWS employees and the programs they support are essential to the safety of the millions of Americans impacted by storms and disasters each year. On February 27, 2025, 108 probationary NWS employees were terminated, adding to the 170 staff who accepted the Administration’s “deferred resignation” plan earlier that month. These staffing cuts are already impacting NWS services, forcing NWS to halt weather balloon launches in New York, Maine, and Alaska that provide daily weather data to meteorologists at weather forecast offices across the country. As we head into hurricane season, 30 weather forecast offices are without a meteorologist-in-charge, one is completely without any managers at all, and nearly a dozen are preparing to shut down 24/7 services without immediate action to address shortages.
    The Department of Commerce is reportedly planning to eliminate an additional 1,000 staff from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), including at NWS, in the coming weeks. All told, NWS offices, already suffering from staffing constraints, could see a 15% reduction in force just months into 2025.
    We request a response to the following questions by June 10, 2025:
    How many of the NWS regional weather forecast offices were impacted by terminations or deferred resignations since January 20, 2025? Please provide a list of affected offices, including how many staff departed and how many remain. 
    With reports of at least one weather forecast office in Goodland, Kansas stopping 24/7 operations due to staffing shortages, how do the Department of Commerce and NOAA plan to maintain continued 24/7 operation of forecasting offices without requiring excessive overtime hours from staff? 
    With a requested budget cut of $1.311 billion for NOAA’s overall budget, and a $209 million cut for NWS procurement of weather satellites and infrastructure, how does the Department of Commerce and NOAA plan to ensure adequate staffing and preparedness in the midst of worsening storm seasons, increasing heat waves, and changing weather patterns?
    As NWS employees are critical to public safety, especially heading into hurricane season, will the Department of Commerce grant an exemption to the hiring freeze to fill these crucial positions?
    We urge you to reassess the staffing needs at NOAA and NWS and reinstate terminated probationary employees swiftly. We appreciate your attention to this matter and look forward to your response.
    Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Moran, Fine Push Tougher Penalties for Visa Overstays After Boulder Attack

    Source: Congressman Nathaniel Moran (R-TX-01)

    Congressmen Nathaniel Moran (R-TX-01) and Randy Fine (R-FL-06) reintroduced the Visa Overstays Penalties Act to close dangerous immigration loopholes and hold accountable those who abuse the legal entry system.

    Washington, D.C. — Today, Congressmen Nathaniel Moran (R-TX-01) and Randy Fine (R-FL-06) reintroduced the Visa Overstays Penalties Act to close dangerous immigration loopholes and hold accountable those who abuse the legal entry system.

    “East Texans understand that illegal immigration doesn’t stop at the border,” said Rep. Moran. “Thousands have entered the U.S. legally, only to overstay their visas and remain here unlawfully. This bill reclassifies visa overstays as ‘illegal entry’ and imposes serious penalties to help restore law and order.”

    The legislation would impose up to six months of jail time for first-time offenders and civil fines starting at $500—doubling with each violation. Several 9/11 hijackers overstayed visas, as did Mohamed Sabry Soliman, the suspect in the recent Boulder, Colorado, terror attack.

    “As we all know, the failed policies of the former Biden-Harris Administration turned every state into a border state,” Moran added. “We cannot allow that era of lawlessness to ever return. We must build on President Trump’s historic momentum to secure and protect our border. Visa overstays must carry real consequences—and this legislation delivers on restoring peace and justice.”

    Rep. Randy Fine (R-FL-06) said, “The only place a foreigner should be the day their visa expires is on a plane out of our country. If you’re not, congratulations—you’re now a criminal alien. Being a criminal has consequences, and this bill adds teeth to existing immigration laws to deter and discourage foreign visitors from violating American law. This law makes preventable tragedies like the antisemitic Muslim terrorist attacks in Boulder less likely and makes our communities safer overall. I’m proud to work with Congressman Moran to co-lead this bill, and I’m looking forward to seeing it passed in the House again.”

    “In 2023, Mohamed Soliman overstayed his tourist visa but was never deported; two years later, he launched an antisemitic terrorist attack that maimed 15 innocent American citizens,” said Rep. August Pfluger (R-TX-11), Chairman of the Republican Study Committee. “This man should have never even been in our country—and yet he was, because the Biden Administration refused to enforce our laws. I’m thankful to Congressman Moran for his leadership in reintroducing the Visa Overstays Penalties Act, which will criminalize the act of overstaying a visa and guarantee that terrorists like Soliman are never again able to illegally remain in our country.”

    Background:

    The legislation is being co-led by Congressman Randy Fine (R-FL-06), reinforcing its national importance and broad Republican support.

    The Visa Overstays Penalties Act includes:

    • Reclassification of Visa Overstays: Overstaying a visa for more than 10 days would be classified as “illegal entry,” aligning it with unauthorized border crossings.
    • Criminal Penalties:

    o    First Offense: Up to six months of imprisonment.

    o    Subsequent Offenses: Up to two years of imprisonment.

    • Civil Penalties:

    o    First Violation: Fines ranging from $500 to $1,000.

    o    Repeat Violations: Fines doubling from the initial amount.

    This legislation aims to address security concerns by ensuring that visa overstays are met with the necessary legal consequences, thereby reinforcing the integrity of the U.S. immigration system.

    The Visa Overstays Penalties Act was originally included as part of H.R. 2, the Secure the Border Act of 2023, which passed the United States House of Representatives with a 219-213 vote last Congress.

    ###

    Related Coverage: Exclusive: Reps. Moran, Fine Introduce Visa Overstays Penalties Act in Wake of Boulder, Colorado Terrorist Attack — Breitbart News

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pfluger’s Bill to Unlock Domestic LNG Potential Advanced by House Energy Subcommittee

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman August Pfluger (TX-11)

    Read his remarks as delivered below:

    H.R. 1949, Unlocking Our Domestic LNG Potential Act, is commonsense. And when you look at section three of the Natural Gas Act, it requires that natural gas exports to countries that have a free trade agreement with the United States be approved without delay. For countries that do not have a free trade agreement with the U.S., the energy secretary is required to approve export requests unless they find that such exports will not be consistent with the public interest.

    Therefore, the Natural Gas Act includes a rebuttable presumption in favor of authorizing U.S. LNG exports in early 2024, after succumbing to political pressure from environmental activists. The previous administration announced a ban on issuing export permits to non-FTA countries while it reviewed the climate impacts of U.S. LNG.

    During this ban, America’s energy dominance took a major hit. Russia overtook the U.S. as the leading gas supplier to Europe. Long-term American contracts were not only jeopardized, but they were actually damaged – some of them irreparably – and globally, buyers were forced to look toward less clean sources. Thankfully, the Trump administration quickly reversed this ban, and just last week, the DOE issued its first LNG export approval.

    My legislation is simple. The Unlocking Our Domestic LNG Potential Act would ensure that a ban is never placed on U.S. LNG exports again. By removing DOE from the process, export restrictions would be repealed, and LNG exports would have equal treatment with other commodities. LNG exports unequivocally benefit our economy, domestic prices, our security, and partners and allies around the world that want our product.

    Congress needs to act to remove the politics from these exports, just as this committee did when it lifted the crude oil export ban in 2015. The IEA expects global gas demand to reach record highs in the coming years, underscoring the need for new LNG supply. It must be the United States, not Iran, not Russia, not any other adversary, who meets this demand and supplies affordable, clean, and abundant LNG to the world.

    I urge my colleagues to support this very commonsense legislation and to vote in favor of H.R. 1949. I yield back.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Trahan Rips Trump’s Plan to Let Palantir Build Dossiers on American Citizens

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lori Trahan (D-MA-03)

    WASHINGTON, DC – Yesterday, during a House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing, Congresswoman Lori Trahan (MA-03) railed against the Trump administration’s plan to turn over Americans’ most personal information that was harvested by Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffers to Palantir so the company can build dossiers on every American.
    “Under the Trump Administration, DOGE aggressively collected sensitive data across agencies, breaking down firewalls that are supposed to protect us. Then came the Executive Order directing agencies to ‘eliminate information silos’ – basically, to share and pool that data,” Congresswoman Trahan said. “And just last week, we learned that Palantir, a Silicon Valley company known for building surveillance tools, is being hired to build AI-powered profiles on every American using the data DOGE collected. It’s hard to overstate how dangerous this is.”
    CLICK HERE or the image below to watch Trahan’s remarks. A transcript is embedded below.

    Last week, the New York Times reported that the Trump administration has drastically increased federal contracting with Palantir, a Silicon Valley tech firm started by Peter Thiel who has donated heavily to Republican campaigns. Palantir has historically worked closely with the Pentagon and the intelligence community to provide big data analytics and AI products, and in recent years has expanded its customer base to include private companies, civilian agencies, and state and local governments. According to the Times report, the company is now being directed to use its AI systems to merge the personal data of Americans collected by different federal agencies into one database, essentially creating a profile on every person in the country.
    During the hearing today, Trahan pointed out how this type of system could be weaponized by the government against Americans.
    “Let me just give you an example – a hypothetical, of course, but not a far-fetched one. Sarah is a regular American. She pays her taxes, owns a gun legally, and is raising her daughter Emma on her own. She and Emma rely on Medicaid to get the care they need,” Congresswoman Trahan continued. “One day, Sarah shares a post on Facebook. She’s concerned about something the President said about firearms, and she posts so. But in Washington, an AI-powered monitoring system flags her post. A political appointee digs into her personal data and sends emails to agency heads urging them to take action against her.”
    “Within days, Sarah’s life falls apart,” Congresswoman Trahan said. “The IRS audits her and claims she owes thousands. Emma’s doctor says her Medicaid isn’t active anymore, and now Sarah has to pay out of pocket. Now, to be clear, this story is made up. But it’s not science fiction. It’s an alarm. It’s a warning.”
    In March, Trahan announced an effort to rewrite the Privacy Act of 1974, a 50-year-old law designed to protect Americans’ privacy that has not been meaningfully updated since its passage in the wake of the Watergate scandal. Dozens of organizations and individuals have responded to Trahan’s request for information about how to strengthen privacy protections while preserving the ability to modernize and improve the efficiency of government services.
    “I’ve spent the past three months talking with civil liberties groups, privacy experts, and people across the country – and the one thing is clear: We need stronger privacy laws,” Congresswoman Trahan concluded. “I believe we can protect people’s data and modernize government to prevent fraud, waste, and abuse. These goals are not at odds – they’re linked.”
    —————————————–
    Congresswoman Lori Trahan
    Remarks As Delivered
    House Oversight and Government Reform Hearing: The Federal Government in the Age of Artificial Intelligence
    June 5, 2025

    Trahan: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I appreciate you allowing me to be a part of this important conversation.
    Over on the Energy and Commerce Committee, which is where I usually serve, we have a lot of conversations about technology, and one thing is always clear: data is at the heart of AI. That’s why I believe that any serious discussion about AI has to start with a conversation about privacy. And that’s what I’m here to do today – to sound the alarm about a deeply troubling trend: our own government’s growing appetite for Americans’ personal data.
    Let me just give you an example – a hypothetical, of course, but not a far-fetched one.
    Sarah is a regular American. She pays her taxes, owns a gun legally, and is raising her daughter Emma on her own. She and Emma rely on Medicaid to get the care they need.
    One day, Sarah shares a post on Facebook. She’s concerned about something the President said about firearms, and she posts so. But in Washington, an AI-powered monitoring system flags her post. A political appointee digs into her personal data and sends emails to agency heads urging them to take action against her.
    Within days, Sarah’s life falls apart. The IRS audits her and claims she owes thousands. Emma’s doctor says her Medicaid isn’t active anymore, and now Sarah has to pay out of pocket.
    Now, to be clear, this story is made up. But it’s not science fiction. It’s an alarm. It’s a warning.
    Mr. Schneier, you talked in your testimony about coercion as an “adversarial use” of data. What kinds of coercion could bad actors inside the government use if they had detailed profiles on every American?

    Mr. Schneier: I would think of it as selective investigation. The government has enormous powers to investigate people, and the question is who they choose to investigate. There’s a famous book from many years ago called “Three Felonies a Day” – that we in our normal lives commit three felonies a day because there are just so many rules and we don’t know them.
    So given things like that, who you choose to enforce the law on matters. So this data can be used to select people whom to investigate, people whom to charge. And this could be used selectively by any regime – even not the U.S. – any country that wants to do this.
    Trahan: Unfortunately, this isn’t a hypothetical trend – it’s already happening.
    Under the Trump Administration, DOGE aggressively collected sensitive data across agencies, breaking down firewalls that are supposed to protect us. Then came the Executive Order  directing agencies to “eliminate information silos” – basically, to share and pool that data. And just last week, we learned that Palantir, a Silicon Valley company known for building surveillance tools, is being hired to build AI-powered profiles on every American using the data DOGE collected.
    It’s hard to overstate how dangerous this is.
    Mr. Schneier, are you worried that once this data is centralized, future administrations – no matter their party – could weaponize it? I mean, are we on the verge of opening Pandora’s box?
    Mr. Schneier: I don’t know if Pandora’s Box has been open years ago, but certainly giving this power to a government is something that feels very un-American. There are reasons why this data was siloed. There are reasons why we didn’t have these powers.
    I mean you can imagine humans doing this well before AI, but we chose not to. So AI can certainly make this more efficient, but yes this is power in the hands of a human who wants to wield it for ill can do that very efficiently.
    Trahan: We need a national reckoning on privacy. That means strong oversight of this Administration and its tech partners, and real legislation to protect Americans’ rights.
    You know, I’ve spent the past three months talking with civil liberties groups, privacy experts, and people across the country – and the one thing is clear: We need stronger privacy laws.
    I believe we can protect people’s data and modernize government to prevent fraud, waste, and abuse. These goals are not at odds – they’re linked.
    So if you’re listening and you’re concerned about what’s happening – about Big Tech, about government overreach, about your family’s privacy – call my office. Let’s have a national conversation. Let’s protect the freedom our founders fought for and the privacy we all deserve.
    And one last thing I just wanted to mention because over the course of this hearing, the Chair has suggested that no one on the other side of the aisle called attention to the harms of the Republicans’ ten-year ban on state AI regulations. That’s patently false.
    We had robust debate on the Energy and Commerce Committee with several Democratic members, myself included, calling attention to this provision during and after our 26-hour markup. In fact, Democrats offered an amendment to strike the language entirely. So Mr. Chair, I ask unanimous consent to enter into the record the results of the recorded vote.
    Chairman: Without objection.
    Trahan: Thank you. I yield back.
    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: TRUMP EFFECT: Higher Pay for American Workers

    Source: US Whitehouse

    “President Trump’s America First Economic Agenda has created a BOOMING economy — jobs are up, unemployment is down, wages are increasing, and inflation is dead. More than 139,000 good jobs were added to the private sector in May, all accounted for by American-born workers. Americans should continue to trust in President Trump, who continues to beat expectations.” — White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt

    President Donald J. Trump’s America First agenda is making its mark on the American economy — with explosive private sector growth, job gains, and wage increases for American workers.

    Look no further than today’s jobs report for proof:

    • In May, the U.S. added 139,000 jobs — smashing expectations for the third straight month, with the private sector accounting for all net job gains.
      • Leisure and hospitality: +48,000 new jobs
      • Transportation and warehousing: +5,800 new jobs
      • Construction: +4,000 new jobs — the fourth straight month of job increases
    • Wages for everyday Americans continue to rise, with real average hourly earnings up by nearly 4% over the past year — far higher than economists’ expectations.
      • Since President Trump took office, real disposable personal income has risen at a 7.5% annualized pace — more than three times the pace than the final year of the Biden Administration.
    • Native-born American workers now account for ALL job gains since President Trump took office in January — reversing the opposite trend from the past two years.
    • Since President Trump took office, 99.8% of job gains have been in the private sector. During the final two years of the Biden Administration, one in four jobs created were in government.

    Here’s what they’re saying:

    • Council of Economic Advisers Chair Steve Miran: “The President is succeeding in creating hundreds of thousands of jobs since he came into office — more than half a million jobs since he came into office — and they’re all going to native-born Americans.”
    • Economist Steve Moore: “This is a blockbuster economy we’re seeing … 4.5% GDP for the second quarter, low inflation — this is telling us right now the jobs are out there for people who want them.”
    • Job Creators Network CEO Alfredo Ortiz: “The small business economy is growing and the private economy is growing. This is exactly what Donald Trump wanted to do for reversing everything that Biden had done … It’s so good to see that we’re actually creating private economy jobs again.”
    • Fox Business Network’s Cheryl Casone: “The markets might be encouraged by the fact that you aren’t seeing job losses … that means that people are maybe going to start spend this summer. They might go actually take a trip they weren’t planning to take — and look, gas prices are lower right now. We’ve got great gas prices, so I think this could be a really good economic story.”
    • ERShares CEO Joel Shulman, Ph.D.: “There’s optimism here on the horizon … CPI last month was a catalyst. I think we’re going to see another catalyst on June 11, coupled with this better-than-expected jobs report — so I think things are looking more optimistic.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: What the UK’s ‘Nato-first’ defence approach tells us about Britain’s place in a volatile world

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Nick Whittaker, Subject Lead in Social Sciences & Law, University of Sussex

    Since the end of the cold war, the relevance of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) has regularly been questioned, even by its most prominent leaders. Its members, therefore, find it necessary to remind each other and the world of its value from time to time.

    The latest example of this is the UK government’s new strategic defence review, which announces a “Nato-first” posture.

    Nato has long been a cornerstone of UK foreign, defence and security policies. But this marks a particularly strident prioritisation of the organisation. It comes just a few years after Boris Johnson’s government began moving the country’s foreign and defence policy priorities towards the Indo-Pacific.

    It tells us much about how Keir Starmer’s administration sees the UK’s place in the world in an unsettled era: as both an influential ally of the US and a reliable partner to European powers, eager to maintain regional and global influence.

    Signed in 1949, the North Atlantic treaty committed its original 12 members to collective security: an attack on one would be an attack on all. In the shadow of the second world war, Nato went further than the nascent United Nations in its defence and security commitments. It brought together a somewhat eclectic mix of states straddling the Atlantic, from the North American behemoths of the US and Canada to tiny Iceland and Luxembourg, the dictatorship of Salazar’s Portugal and the democracies of Norway and Belgium.

    The UK’s participation was largely heralded across an enthusiastic parliament. Winston Churchill, then leader of the opposition, praised this new “fraternal association”. The foreign secretary, Ernest Bevin, celebrated the community of interest [and] cooperation with like-minded people”. UK politicians saw Nato as a means to connect with the US and Canada in particular.


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    The language at the time also reflected the casting of the Soviet Union as a threat to European security. Although the UK welcomed Nato as a liberal democratic organisation dominated by English-speaking peoples, its primary purpose was always to act as a strategic counterweight to the influence and encroachment of the Soviet Union in Europe. Hence the claimed irrelevance of Nato in the 1990s after the cold war, and its renewed importance today in the face of Russian aggression.

    As always with UK foreign and defence policies, the relationship with the US is paramount. The UK’s Nato-first position is no exception. Starmer clearly believes he can forge a working relationship with the US president. Although seemingly far from natural bedfellows (although neither were John F. Kennedy and Harold Macmillan or even, politics aside, Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher), Donald Trump appears unthreatened by the sober, understated Starmer.

    The thought within Starmer’s foreign policy circle may well be that a loud and unequivocal statement of the UK’s commitment to Nato could help persuade Trump to stay the course with an organisation that he has often threatened to pull the US out of.

    If, on the other hand, Starmer et al are more pessimistic and fear Trump making good on his threats, Nato clearly remains an attractive proposition in terms of the UK’s defence policy. While it does commit the UK to the defence of, say, the Baltic States and Finland, by the same token, Nato puts the UK in lockstep with fellow nuclear power, France, as well as the growing military power of Germany and significant others such as Turkey. In uncertain times, such allies are to be valued.

    Global influence

    Even before Brexit, a fear of losing global and regional influence has stalked every British government since 1945.

    Questioning the wisdom of the departure from the EU remains a Westminster taboo. Yet one might forgive the incoming Labour government for feeling the chill of isolation while Trump occupies the White House and Russia threatens the continent. Nato thus also represents a valuable opportunity to retain regional and global influence. Note the language in Starmer’s introduction to the report when he refers to a desire to “lead in Nato”.

    Can Starmer’s ‘Nato-first’ pivot convince Trump to stay?
    Simon Dawson / No 10 Downing Street, CC BY-NC-ND

    While the other defenestrated European colonial powers found post-1945 influence through the Francophonie or becoming leading civilian forces in what became the EU, the UK had the Commonwealth and Nato. These were the prime proxies for the lost colonial influence, even during the long EU interregnum.

    Without the EU and with a more restive Commonwealth, Nato is of even greater importance. Although France’s president Emmanuel Macron is generally enthusiastic about Nato, there is a history of French ambivalence. The UK could well make the claim to be the most steadfastly committed of all the larger European members.

    This renewed commitment to Nato from the UK government is consistent with the historic prioritisation of the organisation by successive administrations. The difference here is the urgency of the context: Europe faces an unprecedented military threat, while the US president is unpredictable and dubious in his attitude towards continental defence.

    The Nato-first stance is a recognition of grim, strategic realities and also a “Hail Mary”, both pragmatic and hopeful. The UK is not alone in desperately hoping to keep the US commitment to European security alive. The strategic review’s commitment to a Nato-first policy may help – at the very least, it signals a UK administration keen to maximise its influence and retain robust ties with European allies.

    Nick Whittaker does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. What the UK’s ‘Nato-first’ defence approach tells us about Britain’s place in a volatile world – https://theconversation.com/what-the-uks-nato-first-defence-approach-tells-us-about-britains-place-in-a-volatile-world-258336

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Ivey Taps Cynthia Lee Almond to Serve as Public Service Commission President

    Source: US State of Alabama

    MONTGOMERY – Governor Kay Ivey on Friday announced she is tapping Cynthia Lee Almond to serve as president of the Public Service Commission. This fills the seat previously held by Twinkle Cavanaugh, who has taken a role with the Trump Administration.

    “Cynthia has proven to be an extremely effective public servant and leader, and I am confident the people of Alabama will be even better served when she takes the helm at the Public Service Commission,” said Governor Ivey. “Since 2021, I have been able to count on Cynthia to get real, meaningful work done in the Legislature, and while I know the people of Tuscaloosa will miss her representation in the State House, every person across this state will now benefit from her leadership on the Public Service Commission.”

    As president, Almond will lead the three-person board responsible for regulating utilities in Alabama. Almond is a seasoned attorney and currently works in the private practice of law. She also takes the helm at the Public Service Commission after serving as a Republican member of the Alabama House of Representatives for District 63.

    Almond brings a wealth of experience to the Public Service Commission and has a solid track-record of serving the people she represents well, whether that be in the House of Representatives or as an attorney. She works directly with a variety of people through her legal work, which has largely concentrated on estate planning, as well as probate, business law and real estate. Additionally, she owns a title company. In the State House, she served as chair of the Tuscaloosa County Local Legislative Delegation and as a member of the Ways and Means Education Committee, Judiciary Committee, Rules Committee and as vice-chair of the Ethics and Campaign Finance Committee.

    Throughout her tenure in the Legislature, Almond has been a partner to Governor Ivey on priorities like the governor’s Safe Alabama public safety package, the Alabama School of Healthcare Sciences, and the Game Plan economic development legislation, among other areas.

    Almond is a true public servant, well-respected and recognized as a strong leader by her peers. Previously, she served four terms on the Tuscaloosa City Council where she was elected president pro tem by her colleagues on the Council, as well as chair of the Finance committee.

    “I am honored to have been asked by Governor Ivey to fill this important position. It is one I accept with great enthusiasm,” said Almond. “I know how important this commission is to the people of Alabama and to the industry sectors it regulates. I believe my training as an attorney and legislator will prove to be helpful in performing this role. I appreciate greatly the confidence shown in me by Governor Ivey, and I will work hard for her and for this great state of Alabama.”

    Almond attended Vanderbilt University and is a graduate of both The University of Alabama and University of Alabama School of Law.

    Born and raised in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Almond gives much back to the community today. She is a graduate of Leadership Alabama and was co-chair for its West Alabama Regional Council. She serves as a Sunday School teacher at First United Methodist Church, has two children and enjoys a variety of activities from playing the piano and tennis to mountain bike riding and more.

    Since 2021, she has represented the people of House District 63 effectively and plans to vacate her seat in the Legislature on Sunday, June 15 ahead of joining the Public Service Commission. The Public Service Commission appointment is effective Monday, June 16, which is when the governor will swear her in as president.

    An official headshot of Cynthia Lee Almond is attached.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: AI Expert Says Musk Just Outran Big Tech in the AI Race

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BALTIMORE, June 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — New briefing reveals Elon Musk has quietly built the most powerful AI system in America — far from Silicon Valley, and without the help of Big Tech.

    In a new briefing to the public, tech entrepreneur and bestselling author James Altucher reveals what he describes as a rogue AI breakthrough — hidden in plain sight.

    According to Altucher, Elon Musk’s xAI has constructed a private supercomputer called Project Colossus, located in Memphis, Tennessee, that has already surpassed Microsoft, Google, and Meta in scale — and is set to grow exponentially before July 1.

    “He’s Already Passed Them”

    Altucher claims Musk’s project was built outside the traditional tech pipeline — with no reliance on legacy platforms or government partnerships.

    “Elon Musk has created the AI mothership… an innovation of such enormous proportion… that he has already surpassed all the leading AI developers.”

    He says the facility is now home to over 200,000 AI chips — and that the system’s scale is unlike anything in commercial use.

    “It contains not just one or two… but 200,000 units of Nvidia’s all-powerful AI chips… making it the most advanced AI facility known to man.”

    A Presidential Assist — But Not a Partnership

    While Altucher says Project Colossus is not a government project, it was unlocked by a key political move: the repeal of Biden’s AI executive order.

    “In one of his FIRST acts as President… Donald Trump overturned Executive Order #14110.

    That reversal, he says, “cleared the path” for developers like Musk to act quickly — and without interference.

    Not ChatGPT — Something Bigger

    Altucher warns that while most people are still fixated on chatbots, Musk’s system is aiming for something far more advanced.

    “AI 2.0… gives that knowledge to intelligent machines that I believe will solve our problems for us.”

    He claims the system will soon receive a major upgrade that could “10X its power” overnight — potentially revealing what he calls the first working form of Artificial Superintelligence.

    About James Altucher

    James Altucher is a computer scientist, entrepreneur, and bestselling author. He studied AI at Cornell and Carnegie Mellon, worked with IBM on the Deep Blue supercomputer, and built early AI-driven systems on Wall Street. His latest work focuses on the rise of independent AI infrastructure and the figures driving it.

    Media Contact:
    Derek Warren
    Public Relations Manager
    Paradigm Press Group
    Email: dwarren@paradigmpressgroup.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Dingell Statement on New Trump Travel Ban

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (12th District of Michigan)

    Dingell Statement on New Trump Travel Ban

    Washington, June 5, 2025

     Congresswoman Debbie Dingell (MI-06) released the following statement on Donald Trump’s new travel ban.   
     
    “Donald Trump’s renewed travel ban will not make us safer, it will create more division. It’s based on bigotry and xenophobia, just like the last one. U.S. policy should not be guided by hatred. This travel ban should not stand, and we must fight against it.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: 4 creative ways to engage children in STEM over the summer: Tips to foster curiosity and problem-solving at home

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Amber M. Simpson, Associate Professor of Mathematics Education, Binghamton University, State University of New York

    Families and caregivers can boost children’s confidence and interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics while school is out for summer. heshphoto/Getty Images

    The Trump administration is reshaping the pursuit of science through federal cuts to research grants and the Department of Education. This will have real consequences for students interested in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM learning.

    One of those consequences is the elimination of learning opportunities such as robotics camps and access to advanced math courses for K-12 students.

    As a result, families and caregivers are more essential than ever in supporting children’s learning.

    Based on my research, I offer four ways to support children’s summer learning in ways that feel playful and engaging but still foster their interest, confidence and skills in STEM.

    1. Find a problem

    To support STEM learning outside of school, encourage children to find and solve problems.
    kali9/Getty Images

    Look for “problems” in or around your home to engineer a solution for. Engineering a solution could include brainstorming ideas, drawing a sketch, creating a prototype or a first draft, testing and improving the prototype and communicating about the invention.

    For example, one family in our research created an upside-down soap dispenser for the following problem: “the way it’s designed” − specifically, the straw − “it doesn’t even reach the bottom of the container. So there’s a lot of soap sitting at the bottom.”

    To identify a problem and engage in the engineering design process, families are encouraged to use common materials. The materials may include cardboard boxes, cotton balls, construction paper, pine cones and rocks.

    Our research found that when children engage in engineering in the home environment with caregivers, parents and siblings, they communicate about and apply science and math concepts that are often “hidden” in their actions.

    For instance, when building a paper roller coaster for a marble, children think about how the height will affect the speed of the marble. In math, this relates to the relationship between two variables, or the idea that one thing, such as height, impacts another, the speed. In science, they are applying concepts of kinetic energy and potential energy. The higher the starting point, the more potential energy is converted into kinetic energy, which makes the marble move faster.

    In addition, children are learning what it means to be an engineer through their actions and experience. Families and caregivers play a role in supporting their creative thinking and willingness to work through challenging problems.

    2. Spark curiosity

    Spontaneous learning moments can lead to deep engagement and learning of STEM concepts.
    cglade/Getty Images

    Open up a space for exploration around STEM concepts driven by their interests.

    Currently, my research with STEM professionals who were homeschooled talk about the power of learning sparked by curiosity.

    One participant stated, “At one time, I got really into ladybugs, well Asian Beatles I guess. It was when we had like hundreds in our house. I was like, what is happening? So, I wanted to figure out like why they were there, and then the difference between ladybugs and Asian beetles because people kept saying, these aren’t actually ladybugs.”

    Researchers label this serendipitous science engagement, or even spontaneous math moments. The moments lead to deep engagement and learning of STEM concepts. This may also be a chance to learn things with your child.

    3. Facilitate thinking

    In my research, being uncertain about STEM concepts may lead to children exploring and considering different ideas. One concept in particular − playful uncertainties − is when parents and caregivers know the answer to a child’s uncertainties but act as if they do not know.

    For example, suppose your child asks, “How can we measure the distance between St. Louis, Missouri, and Nashville, Tennessee, on this map?” You might respond, “I don’t know. What do you think?” This gives children the chance to share their ideas before a parent or caregiver guides them toward a response.

    4. Bring STEM to life

    Overhearing or participating in budget talks can help children develop math skills and financial literacy.
    SeizaVisuals/Getty Images

    Turn ordinary moments into curious conversations.

    “This recipe is for four people, but we have 11 people coming to dinner. What should we do?”

    In a recent interview, one participant described how much they learned from listening in on financial conversations, seeing how decisions got made about money, and watching how bills were handled. They were developing financial literacy and math skills.

    As they noted, “By the time I got to high school, I had a very good basis on what I’m doing and how to do it and function as a person in society.”

    Globally, individuals lack financial literacy, which can lead to negative outcomes in the future when it comes to topics such as retirement planning and debt.

    Why is this important?

    Research shows that talking with friends and family about STEM concepts supports how children see themselves as learners and their later success in STEM fields, even if they do not pursue a career in STEM.

    My research also shows how family STEM participation gives children opportunities to explore STEM ideas in ways that go beyond what they typically experience in school.

    In my view, these kinds of STEM experiences don’t compete with what children learn in school − they strengthen and support it.

    Amber M. Simpson receives funding from the U.S. National Science Foundation.

    ref. 4 creative ways to engage children in STEM over the summer: Tips to foster curiosity and problem-solving at home – https://theconversation.com/4-creative-ways-to-engage-children-in-stem-over-the-summer-tips-to-foster-curiosity-and-problem-solving-at-home-257407

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Debates over presidential power to suspend habeas corpus resurface in Trump administration

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Brooks D. Simpson, Foundation Professor of History, Arizona State University

    There’s a conflict brewing over the rights of the arrested and detained; it’s not a new conflict. busra İspir, iStock/Getty Images Plus

    The principle of habeas corpus, a legal phrase, is a simple one: Translated from the Latin as “produce the body,” it provides that a judge may compel prosecutors to supply evidence to determine whether someone has been legally detained or arrested.

    In the U.S., a detained or arrested individual, or their legal representative, may ask a judge to decide based on the evidence presented whether the detainee has been legally confined. That process is termed “seeking a writ.”

    Suspending the privilege of the writ, also known as “suspending the writ,” denies that individual or their representation from making that request or a judge from honoring it. The “privilege” in that phrase is a right of the accused.

    In the past few months, members of the Trump administration have raised the issue of the president’s power to suspend the privilege of habeas corpus.

    White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller in May 2025 shared with the media the news that administration officials were exploring the possibility of suspending the privilege of the writ to help the administration deport immigrants quickly.

    Eleven days later, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem declared at a congressional hearing that habeas corpus “is a constitutional right that the president has to be able to remove people from this country,” a misunderstanding of this foundational legal right immediately challenged by New Hampshire Senator Maggie Hassan.

    Article I of the U.S. Constitution declares that “the Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.” Suspension is thus a grave and serious matter.

    This is not the first time that Americans have debated which branch of government – the executive branch or Congress – has the power to suspend the privilege of the writ and under what circumstances it may do so.

    Sen. Maggie Hassan asks Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to define habeas corpus; Noem can’t.

    Lincoln and the Great Writ

    Habeas corpus became a major point of controversy during the Civil War, when President Abraham Lincoln suspended the privilege of the writ, first in parts of Maryland and later throughout the nation, without seeking prior congressional approval.

    While the Constitution provides for the suspension of the writ, the document is silent as to who has the power to exercise this authority. Although most of this section of the Constitution concerns the powers of Congress, it also addresses the power and authority of other branches in specific instances. And the use of the passive voice – “shall not be suspended” – in this section leaves the question of who can suspend the writ open to interpretation.

    The questions of who may suspend the privilege of the writ and under what circumstances emerged in the spring of 1861.

    On April 12, Confederate forces fired on U.S.-controlled Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South Carolina, an act that is considered the formal start of the war. A week later, Marylanders supporting secession clashed with militia from Massachusetts and Pennsylvania who were making their way through Baltimore to defend Washington.

    Lincoln refused to honor requests from Maryland Governor Thomas Hicks and Baltimore Mayor George Brown to avoid transporting reinforcements through Baltimore. The president initially tried to skirt any conflict by routing the reinforcements through Annapolis.

    This proved a stopgap measure. On April 27, Lincoln authorized General Winfield Scott, commanding general of the U.S. Army, to suspend the privilege of the writ between Philadelphia and Washington, if necessary. This would permit arbitrary arrests and detaining of people determined to be acting in support of the insurrection.

    Taney challenges Lincoln

    To protect national security, U.S. military authorities arrested John Merryman on May 25, 1861. Merryman, who was from Baltimore, was suspected of involvement in destroying railroad bridges to obstruct Union troop movements.

    Chief Justice Roger B. Taney honored a request from Merryman’s lawyers to issue a writ of habeas corpus, only to have federal military authorities refuse to produce Merryman, who remained at his cell in Fort McHenry.

    Taney then ruled that neither Lincoln nor military personnel under his command could suspend the privilege of the writ when it came to civilians such as Merryman.

    “If at any time the public safety should require the suspension of the powers vested by this act in the courts of the United States, it is for the Legislature to say so,” wrote Taney, quoting an 1807 opinion by Chief Justice John Marshall.

    Days later, on June 1, Taney offered a more extended decision reflecting his reasoning that Congress, not the president, could suspend the privilege of the writ.

    Taney was challenging the president’s authority to act unilaterally.

    Lincoln ignored Taney’s ruling. He reasoned that in time of emergency, especially with Congress not in session, he – as president – was compelled to act in the interests of national security. He did so to protect the movement of troops through Maryland to defend the national capital.

    Not only did Lincoln’s order remain in place, but the president later expanded its geographic scope in several instances, most notably in September 1862. On the heels of issuing the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, Lincoln authorized the detention of individuals accused of obstructing efforts to raise troops or who sought to support the rebellion.

    Unwilling to concede that Lincoln’s actions need not seek congressional approval, Congress, first in 1861, then through the Habeas Corpus Act of 1863 offered retroactive sanction of the actions of the executive branch and, in 1863, empowered Lincoln to suspend the privilege of the writ in the future in the interests of national security for the duration of the rebellion.

    Democrats, however, criticized Lincoln’s actions as arbitrary, unconstitutional and smacking of tyranny.

    President Abraham Lincoln’s 1862 proclamation suspending the use of habeas corpus.
    Mississippi State University

    Executive overreach?

    Almost a decade later, in 1871, President Ulysses S. Grant declined to act on his own to suspend the privilege of the writ to prosecute white supremacist terrorists in the Reconstruction South, requiring that Congress first pass legislation authorizing him to do so.

    Since the Civil War, only once has a president unilaterally suspended the privilege of the writ without prior congressional authorization. That’s what President Franklin D. Roosevelt did in Hawaii after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, in order to combat any suspicious activity that might be construed as espionage.

    With Congress currently in session, lawmakers could authorize the president to suspend the privilege of the writ to set aside debates over executive overreach. Otherwise, presidents might define as emergencies situations that do not meet the extreme circumstances envisioned by the Constitution while sidestepping congressional approval.

    Brooks D. Simpson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Debates over presidential power to suspend habeas corpus resurface in Trump administration – https://theconversation.com/debates-over-presidential-power-to-suspend-habeas-corpus-resurface-in-trump-administration-257195

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: Next-Generation Lawmakers Unveil Legislative Agenda to End Corruption in Washington

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Hillary Scholten – Michigan

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Congresswoman Hillary Scholten (MI-03) joined a group of next-generation reformers in the House of Representatives to introduce the “End Corruption Now”legislative agenda. An effort to confront political corruption and clean up government that includes seven bills designed to put power back in the hands of the American people by preventing the President, Executive Branch officials, and Members of Congress from personally benefiting from their offices.

    After watching President Trump’s administration engage in brazen corruption, the group of representatives including Reps. Hillary Scholten (MI-03), Joe Neguse (CO-02), Angie Craig (MN-02), Seth Magaziner (RI-02), Chris Deluzio (PA-17), Pat Ryan (NY-18), and Emilia Sykes (OH-13) – felt compelled to act. 

    “At a time when public trust in our institutions is at a breaking point, the Integrity in Government Act is about restoring accountability at the highest levels of power,” saidRep. Scholten. “This bill protects the nonpartisan watchdogs who work on behalf of the American people and ensures that the White House–regardless of who is in office–is subject to real oversight to protect taxpayer dollars and ensure efficiency. Our democracy depends on transparency, and the American people deserve nothing less.” 

    “Donald Trump’s first 100 days back in office were marked by chaos, corruption, and self-dealing. He spent the time stacking his administration with billionaire donors and promoting shameless cryptocurrency scams, all while his Republican supporters in Congress trade stocks to benefit their own portfolios. The time for this corruption to end is now. We must clean up government for future generations and ensure our government is serving the American people, not special interests,” saidRep. Neguse. 

    “Elected officials are elected to serve their constituents, not their own self-interests,” saidRep. Craig. “It’s past time we pass legislation to clean up Washington and ensure our tax dollars are being spent as they should – on improving the lives of everyday Americans. That’s why I’m proud to be partnering with my colleagues on this anti-corruption campaign to make common-sense reforms that will restore integrity, transparency and efficiency to our government.”  

    “Members of Congress are elected to serve the American people, not to enrich themselves,” saidRep. Magaziner. “We must ban Member of Congress from trading stocks, because there should be no opportunity for elected officials to profit off of their positions. I am proud to join Representative Neguse and other colleagues in our effort to bring real ethics reform to Washington.”

    “Corporate power has long rigged the system against the American people,” saidRep. Deluzio. “We must root out this corruption to restore the American Dream. Stopping corporate criminals from taking power from inside our government itself is a great place to start. I’m introducing the No Corporate Crooks Act as a part of the ‘End Corruption Now’ legislative agenda because someone convicted of crimes like bribery, embezzlement, fraud, insider trading, and more shouldn’t be let anywhere near the levers of power in the executive branch.” 

    “For too long, politicians in both parties have put their own gain ahead of what’s best for the American people. The brazen corruption of the last few months has only highlighted the need for urgent action. It is time for comprehensive reform to ensure politicians serve the people, not themselves,” saidRep. Ryan. “No more getting rich off trading stocks. An end to Members of Congress becoming lobbyists. Getting rid of kickbacks for billionaire friends. I’m proud to be working alongside a group of next-generation lawmakers who refuse to accept the status quo – we’re here to clean things up.”

    “When public officials use their power for personal gain and are shielded from accountability, we undermine democracy itself,” saidRep. Sykes. “This bill – and the broader End Corruption Now agenda – is about restoring public trust and ensuring that no one is above the law. The American people deserve a government that works for them, not for the biggest wallets or the best connections.” 

    The “End Corruption Now” legislative agenda targets conflicts of interest and would put a stop to the selling of access and influence, including banning Members of Congress from trading stocks or becoming lobbyists, and strengthening anti-corruption laws. It includes the following bills:  

    • The Integrity in Government (IG) Act, introduced by Rep. Hillary Scholten, strengthens checks and balances by installing new oversight measures for the White House and its top offices and protecting independent watchdogs from political retaliation. Read the bill text HERE.
    • The Close the Revolving Door Act, introduced by Rep. Joe Neguse, places a lifetime ban on Members of Congress from serving as lobbyists. The bill is championed in the U.S. Senate by Senator Michael Bennet. Read the bill text HERE.
    • The Restoring Integrity in Democracy Resolution, introduced by Rep. Angie Craig, would prohibit Members of Congress from serving on corporate boards. Read the bill text HERE.
    • The Transparent Representation Upholding Service and Trust (TRUST) in Congress Act, introduced by Rep. Seth Magaziner, effectively bans Members of Congress, their spouses, and dependent children from trading individual stocks by requiring them to either divest from individual stock holdings or move their investments into a qualified blind trust during their entire tenure in Congress. Read the bill text HERE.
    • The No Corporate Crooks Act, introduced by Rep. Chris DeLuzio, prohibits any chief executive officers, in either the public or private sector, convicted of covered financial crimes from serving in the executive branch. Read the bill text HERE
    • The Stop Millionaires Using Service for Kickbacks (MUSK) Act, introduced by Rep. Pat Ryan, requires government employees defined as Executive Schedule (I-IV) employees, Special Government Employees, and people in the Executive Office of the President to recuse themselves from any matters affecting the financial interests of their previous employers for the four-year period. Read the bill text HERE.
    • The Closing Bribery Loopholes Act, introduced by Rep. Emilia Sykes, closes loopholes in the federal bribery statute by clarifying the definition of an “official act” by a public official. The bill expands the definition to prohibit public officials from improperly using their position for private gain. Read the bill text HERE

    The “End Corruption Now”agenda is endorsed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), Public Citizen, and Project On Government Oversight (POGO). 

    “Americans should be able to trust that their elected officials and senior policymakers are serving the public’s interest, rather than private financial interests,” saidDebra Perlin, Vice President for Policy at Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. “CREW applauds Reps. Neguse, Magaziner, Deluzio, Scholten, Ryan, Sykes, and Craig for their initiative, leadership and collaboration to put together a multi-faceted anti-corruption package. For far too long, some have accepted the status quo, but in the face of recent and unprecedented examples of how the system can be manipulated for private gain, now is the time for Congress to take action and pass effective anti-corruption legislation.” 

    “Bribery, kickbacks, pay-to-play. These are the components of a criminal enterprise – not a functional federal government. The tsunami of corruption flowing from the White House has flooded all of Washington and left a revolting stench that’s impossible to ignore. This fire hose of anti-corruption measures will blast corruptionhead on by protecting independent government watchdogs from being weaponized, banning former members of Congress from being lobbyists, and stopping convicted corporate crooks and special government employees from personally profiting at the people’s expense. Now is not a time to worry – it’s time to clean house,” saidLisa Gilbert, Co-President, Public Citizen. 

    “At a time when the federal government does not have the trust and confidence of the American people, it is more important than ever for leaders to lead and respond accordingly,” saidDylan Hedtler-Gaudette, Acting Vice-President of Policy and Government Affairs at the Project On Government Oversight (POGO). “Not since the post-Watergate era has there been such a need for a comprehensive anti-corruption, good governance reform agenda. This is why Rep. Neguse and his colleagues should be applauded for this bold reform initiative, aimed at cracking down on corruption and bringing about the government that the American people deserve. Whether it’s reining in the corruption of the revolving door or banning the unethical practice of congressional stock trading or strengthening oversight tools like inspectors general, these reforms are long overdue and now is the time to get them done.” 

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Fraudulent Billing Scheme Targeted in False Claims Act Complaint Against Physical Therapy Practice

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    PENSACOLA, FLORIDA – The United States has filed a complaint under the False Claims Act (“FCA”) against Absolute Physical & Aquatic Therapy, LLC; Chipley Physical Therapy, LLC; Ruben Laurel; and Lorrie Laurel, announced U.S. Attorney John P. Heekin.  The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for Northern District of Florida, alleges that the Defendants billed the Government for services that Defendant Lorrie Laurel, a physical therapist, performed while she was abroad.

    Defendant Chipley Physical Therapy, LLC (“CPT”) provides outpatient physical and aquatic therapy services across the Florida panhandle in Chipley, Marianna, and Bonifay, and is owned and operated by Defendants Ruben and Lorrie Laurel. Defendant Absolute Physical & Aquatic Therapy (“APAT”) is a physical therapy billing company owned and operated by Defendant Ruben Laurel.

    The government’s complaint alleges Defendants knowingly submitted false claims for payment in violation of the FCA by billing the government for services while Defendant Lorrie Laurel was out of the country and on cruises in Mexico, Jamacia, Aruba, and the Bahamas between July 2019 and March 2024.  More specifically, the complaint alleges Defendants submitted 613 claims for payment to the United States for services Defendant Lorrie Laurel allegedly performed at CPT while she was abroad. 

    U.S. Attorney Heekin said: “This lawsuit demonstrates our firm commitment to hold healthcare providers accountable for fraudulent billing and fulfills the promise of President Donald J. Trump and Attorney General Pam Bondi to aggressively root out fraud, waste, and abuse.  Healthcare providers who are fraudulently charging the federal government for medical services not rendered will be vigorously pursued by our office.”

    The lawsuit is captioned United States ex rel. Ariel Bowen v. Absolute Physical & Aquatic Therapy, LLC, et al., Case No. 5:21-cv-236-TKW-MJF (N.D. Fla.), and is being handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Florida. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services provided substantial assistance in the investigation.

    The United States is represented in this matter by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mary Ann Couch and Marie Moyle for the Northern District of Florida.

    The claims asserted against defendants are allegations only and there has been no determination of liability.

    The United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Florida is one of 94 offices that serve as the nation’s principal litigators under the direction of the Attorney General.  To access public court documents online, please visit the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida website. For more information about the United States Attorney’s Office, Northern District of Florida, visit http://www.justice.gov/usao/fln/index.html.

    MIL Security OSI