Saturday, January 10, 2026

Something to Know - 10 January

Christopher Armitage lays out his newsletter with strident conviction that we need to exercise extreme resistance if we are to overcome the Fascist state that Trump is crafting.   Trump was supposedly elected on his promises to cut inflation, lower costs, and improve our lives.   He is doing none of that.  The sick man is consumed with power and not being accountable for anything.   We have to resist in the most extreme ways and push back and take back both houses of congress to start with.   His goal is to install a Fascist state, abolish all elections, and amass more power to invade and rule as he wants.   So, let's quit trying to figure out how this happened, and concentrate on getting rid of him and all the elements who got him to where he is today.   Armitage writes below that "this may be something that pearl clutchers may want to sit out".   Armitage points out that our federal government has been bullied into acquiescence by the executive branch.   So, it is up to the state and local governments to exercise constant resistance in this process.   The citizens need to make a forceful vocal and visual display of of resistance all the way to the midterms and beyond  

Christopher Armitage from The Existentialist Republic cmarmitage@substack.com 

6:33 AM (1 hour ago)
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How Extrajudicial Killings Became Legal

And how we can change that without waiting for a single election.

Jan 10
 
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Image from CBS/Getty Images

Bottom Line Up Front for Hardcore Activists

Here are three clear demands:

One: Agents identify or face arrest. Badge number, name, agency. Refusal means you have no authority. Prosecute accordingly.

Two: States prosecute federal agents who commit crimes. When the feds intervene, keep prosecuting. Stopping is acquiescence. Continuing is justice.

Three: Prosecute Jonathan Ross for the murder of Renee Nicole Good.

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In February 2013, the Police Executive Research Forum completed an internal review that Customs and Border Protection had commissioned. The nonprofit organization, which develops best practices for law enforcement agencies, examined use-of-force incidents along the border.¹

Among its findings: Border Patrol agents had deliberately stepped in front of moving vehicles to manufacture justification for shooting the drivers. Agents had fired across the border at rock throwers when simply moving away would have resolved the situation. The agency demonstrated what the review called a "lack of diligence" in investigating incidents where agents discharged their weapons.¹

The report recommended that Border Patrol bar agents from shooting at vehicles unless lives were threatened and prohibit firing at rock throwers entirely. Customs and Border Protection rejected both recommendations. Border Patrol Chief Mike Fisher told the Associated Press that implementing such restrictions would be "very problematic" and "potentially put Border Patrol agents in danger."²

The agency then attempted to suppress the scathing twenty-one page report from public view.³

That sequence of events captures something essential about how the United States arrived at a system where federal agents can kill without meaningful legal consequence. The mechanisms that permit this did not emerge from legislation or executive policy. They emerged from decades of judicial decisions that gradually erected an architecture of impunity so thorough that it has become the norm rather than the exception.

The doctrine of qualified immunity provides the first layer of protection. In 1967, the Supreme Court decided Pierson v. Ray and held that police officers could claim immunity from civil suits if they acted in "good faith" and with "probable cause."⁴ The Court reasoned that officers should not face financial ruin for doing their jobs. This seemed reasonable enough at the time.

But in 1982, the Court transformed the doctrine in Harlow v. Fitzgerald.⁵ It eliminated the good faith requirement entirely. Government officials would now receive immunity unless their conduct violated "clearly established law," which courts have interpreted to mean a prior decision involving nearly identical facts.

The perverse result is that constitutional violations can go unremedied indefinitely. A victim must point to a previous case where another official engaged in essentially the same conduct and was held accountable. If no such case exists, the official receives immunity regardless of how egregious the behavior. Courts sometimes acknowledge that an official violated the Constitution and then grant immunity anyway because no sufficiently similar case preceded it.

As Judge Carlton Reeves wrote in a 2024 opinion denying qualified immunity, the doctrine means government agents "can get away with violating your rights as long as they do so in a novel way."⁶

Justice Sonia Sotomayor has repeatedly criticized this framework. In her dissent in Kisela v. Hughes, she described a "disturbing trend" of courts siding with officers who use excessive force, noting that qualified immunity has become "an absolute shield" that "tells officers that they can shoot first and think later."⁷

The case involved an Arizona officer who shot a mentally impaired woman four times as she stood stationary in her driveway holding a kitchen knife at her side. The Court granted immunity because no prior decision had established that this precise conduct was unconstitutional.⁷

Federal agents enjoy additional protections beyond qualified immunity. Civil suits against federal officers arise under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents, a 1971 decision that created a damages remedy for constitutional violations by federal officials.⁸ But the Supreme Court has spent the past two decades severely restricting when Bivens claims can proceed.

In Ziglar v. Abbasi, decided in 2017, the Court held that extending Bivens to any "new context" requires courts to exercise extreme caution.⁹ What counts as a new context has proven remarkably broad.

The case of Hernandez v. Mesa demonstrates how these doctrines combine to produce complete immunity for federal agents who kill.¹⁰ In June 2010, Border Patrol Agent Jesus Mesa Jr. shot and killed Sergio Adrián Hernández Güereca, a fifteen-year-old Mexican boy. Mesa stood on American soil in El Paso. Hernández stood on Mexican soil in Ciudad Juarez. Video footage contradicted Mesa's claim that Hernández had thrown rocks at him.

The Department of Justice investigated and concluded that Mesa had not violated agency policy, declining to bring charges.¹⁰

When Hernández's parents sued Mesa under Bivens, the Supreme Court held in 2020 that they could not proceed because a cross-border shooting constituted a "new context" with "foreign relations and national security implications." Justice Samuel Alito's majority opinion acknowledged that extending Bivens might provide justice to the family but concluded that doing so would interfere with the executive branch's authority over border security and foreign policy.¹⁰

The Court suggested that if such families deserved a remedy, Congress should create one.¹⁰

This is the system we inherited. And now we are watching it metastasize.

Since January 2025, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents have conducted raids across the country while masked, in plainclothes, and without visible identification. Human Rights Watch documented agents concealing agency insignias and using unmarked vehicles to detain people at courthouses, schools, workplaces, homes, and on public transport.¹¹

ICE justifies the practice as necessary "to prevent doxing." One federal district court judge dismissed that rationale as "disingenuous, squalid and dishonorable," writing that "ICE goes masked for a single reason: to terrorize Americans into quiescence. We have never tolerated an armed masked secret police."¹¹

Except we have been tolerating it for the past year. Are we going to tolerate it for another year? And if the next election does not go our way, or gets stolen, then what? We wait another two years after that?

The Center for American Progress reported agents swinging batons, smashing car windows, using explosives to blow doors off homes with children inside, emerging from unmarked vehicles with weapons drawn, and grabbing people off the street.¹²

Criminals have exploited this chaos. A South Carolina man was charged with kidnapping after posing as an agent and confronting a Latino driver. A Florida woman kidnapped her ex-boyfriend's wife while wearing an "ICE" shirt and a mask. In Philadelphia, a man posing as an agent robbed an automobile shop. In Minnesota, a man allegedly disguised as law enforcement murdered a state legislator and her husband.¹³

On January 7, 2026, ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, a thirty-seven-year-old woman whose car had briefly blocked traffic during an enforcement operation.¹⁴ Video shows Ross drawing his weapon and firing three shots as she drove away. The car crashed into a light pole about one hundred feet down the road.

ICE is not law enforcement. It is an immigration enforcement agency with jurisdiction limited to immigration matters. A woman blocking traffic is not an immigration matter. These agents operate as though they possess general police powers. They do not.

President Trump immediately claimed on social media that Ross acted in "self defense." There will be no federal prosecution. Everyone knows that, even the GOP.

The legal architecture works precisely as intended. Qualified immunity blocks civil suits unless a victim can point to a prior case with nearly identical facts. Bivens restrictions prevent extending damages remedies to any new context, which proves remarkably easy to manufacture. Local prosecutors face pressure not to pursue charges, or to overcharge to sabotage potential convictions. Federal investigators with integrity have been fired or resigned.

The Heritage Foundation Supreme Court wants this.

We cannot wait until the next election to address the "secret police abducting and murdering people without anyone stopping them" problem.

We do not get to operate in this environment for years and remain a democracy. Masked, unidentified agents snatching people off streets in unmarked vehicles is not compatible with constitutional governance. The FBI will not hold these agents accountable. The Department of Justice will not prosecute them.

These organizations are not going to hold themselves accountable.

Part of why we have lost so much ground is the mismatch between how our side operates and how theirs does. The attorney mindset says: we will pass legislation creating a ten thousand dollar fine for agents who refuse to identify themselves. We will establish a hotline for reporting misconduct. We will form a commission to study the problem.

In the months it takes institutionalists to draft legislation, hold hearings, negotiate amendments, and celebrate incremental progress, fascists enact massive structural changes that render those incremental gains meaningless.

An effective response means stepping up with the same urgency. An executive order at the state level: if you claim authority to detain people or use force in this state and refuse to identify yourself when asked, we treat you as a criminal acting with malintent.

If you are a local or state law enforcement officer who refuses to enforce state law against federal agents committing crimes, you lose your job. If you obstruct state prosecutions, you face charges yourself. Police departments that refuse to cooperate get their leadership replaced. Everyone who breaks the law faces prosecution to the fullest extent.

Local and state law enforcement should respond to reports of armed, masked individuals grabbing people off the street as what they appear to be: kidnappings and assaults in progress. If someone claiming to be law enforcement refuses to identify themselves, they have not established that they are law enforcement. Dispatch should treat these calls as high priority. Officers should respond as they would to any violent crime.

If local police departments refuse to respond, governors should engage the National Guard. The safety of residents cannot depend on taking the word of someone masked, armed, wearing gear you can buy off eBay, and screaming "get the fuck out of the car bitch."

Nobody gets to be above the law.

Yes, this is disruptive. It is disruptive because it reinstitutes rule of law when the more powerful actor in the situation has abandoned it.

This is what wins. We are using these tactics to enforce accountability and protect constitutional rights, not to destroy them. We are not seizing power to abuse it. We are wielding power to prevent abuse. That distinction matters.

But the tactical reality remains: incremental measures designed to avoid conflict do not work against adversaries who embrace conflict. We either match their willingness to act decisively or we lose.

If the pearl clutchers need to sit this one out, please do so.

States can prosecute federal agents who commit criminal acts. The Supremacy Clause provides some protection for federal officials, but only when they are reasonably acting within the bounds of lawful federal duties.¹⁵

Shooting into a vehicle at a driver who poses no threat to anyone is not a lawful federal duty. Smashing windows, beating civilians, and conducting home invasions without identification are not lawful federal duties.

Minnesota has successfully prosecuted police officers for murder before. States can prosecute ICE agents too.¹⁶

The process will be contested. Federal law allows defendants to remove state criminal prosecutions to federal court. The Trump administration will fight every prosecution with every tool available.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has already claimed that prosecuting federal agents constitutes conspiracy to interfere with immigration enforcement. Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller told ICE officers that "anybody who lays a hand on you or tries to stop you or tries to obstruct you is committing a felony."¹⁵

He is lying.

Multiple states have indicted, charged, and arrested federal officers for conduct that exceeded their official duties. Virginia charged a federal tax collector posse with shooting horses and cattle during an 1898 shootout. The history of state prosecution of federal officials stretches back to the War of 1812.¹⁶

States possess this authority. The federal government will try to remove cases to federal court and sabotage them through sympathetic judges. So let them. Run the prosecutions anyway. Build the record. Make the arguments. Create the precedent. Even if individual prosecutions fail in hostile federal courts, the documentation establishes facts that may support future prosecution when the political environment changes.

The conflict has to happen. There is no path through this that avoids it. They are the ones writing rules that place themselves above the law.

If the federal government will not provide accountability, and if federal courts have constructed an architecture specifically designed to prevent accountability, then states must provide it instead. That is what federalism means. That is what it has always meant.

State attorneys general should establish portals for civilians to report encounters with unidentified federal agents and should investigate every report. Prosecutors should bring charges where evidence supports them.

We are not asking permission. The administration has made clear that it considers itself above accountability. It has constructed an enforcement apparatus designed to terrorize communities while remaining invisible to legal consequence.

The response cannot be to wait politely for the next election while masked agents assault, kidnap, and murder innocent people. The response must be to use every tool available to impose the consequences that the federal government refuses to impose.

Some of this will fail. Federal courts will block some prosecutions. The administration will retaliate against states that resist. There will be chaos and conflict and uncertainty.

But the alternative is acquiescence to a system where government agents can kill without identification, without accountability, and without consequence. That is not a system compatible with constitutional democracy.

We either resist it or we accept it. There is no third option.

Three demands. There is no legal rule that says anyone is above the law. Not the Supremacy Clause. Not qualified immunity.

One: Identify or be arrested. Badge number, name, agency. Refusal means you have no authority. Prosecute accordingly.

Two: States prosecute federal agents who commit crimes. When the feds intervene, keep prosecuting. Stopping is acquiescence. Continuing is justice.

Three: Prosecute Jonathan Ross for the murder of Renee Nicole Good.




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Juan Matute
CCRC


Friday, January 9, 2026

Andy Borowitz


The Borowitz Report borowitzreport@substack.com 
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4:13 AM (6 hours ago)
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Hugo Burnand

LONDON (The Borowitz Report)—In a move that was widely hailed across the free world, on Friday King Charles III of the United Kingdom reasserted British rule over the colonies formerly known as the United States of America.

"In recent days, Donald Trump, Marco Rubio and Stephen Miller have been advocating a muscular return to colonialism," the monarch said. "I couldn't agree more with those chaps."

"We lost the colonies because our King went insane," Charles added. "But now the shoe's on the other bloody foot, isn't it?"

As for what this change in status would mean for Trump, the King said, "Perhaps he could room with his old chum, my idiot brother."


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Juan Matute
CCRC


Something to Know - 9 January


Minneapolis, Minnesota.   Again.   The first time it was George Floyd.  George Perry Floyd Jr. was an African American man who was murdered by a white police officer in Minneapolis, Minnesota, during an arrest made after a store clerk suspected Floyd had used a counterfeit twenty-dollar bill, on May 25, 2020.  The second time it is Renee Nicole Good.  Renee Nicole Good, the mother of three shot and killed by a federal agent after allegedly swerving her car toward him, worked as a Minneapolis-based immigration activist serving as a member of "ICE Watch," federal sources told a news source.   Homeland Security news sources revealed that the group aims to monitor, track, interfere and oppose ongoing federal immigration enforcement operations. The group is present in multiple sanctuary cities across the country.    The murder of George Floyd united the African American communities along with concerned citizens across the land.   Now, with the murder of Renee Good, all Americans are coming together in unity in opposition to the violence and fascism of the current administration.   The killing (murder) of normal citizens as the Trump/Miller regime plays out its agenda of genocide places the evil of the Trump administration to the top of the list.   It was bound to happen.  The employment of thugs and sadistic goons remaining from the lists of Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, Patriot Front, Ku Klux Klan and others into the ICE, Border Patrol, etc, has now given the federal police forces a culture of supremacist violent ideology that allows them to do what they were guilty of before, but now have a uniform, a badge, and weaponry to play out their anti-social violence.   If Renee Nicole Good is on an FBI watch list, then so am I. There are thousands of others in other cities volunteering for similar programs to protect and defend  those who need assistance.   Renee's body was still buckled into her driver's seat with the stuffed animals for her children beside her on the passenger's side of the car as she was carrying out and giving of her time in volunteer work.  And now we have every force in the federal government maligning her.   The image of Vice President Vance calling her an enemy of the people, is not going over too well because she was just an ordinary white American mother, just like millions of others.   May her legacy and the legacy of another Minnesota victim serve to bring down the darkest and saddest political movement the United States of America has ever experienced.


Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 

12:07 AM (7 hours ago)
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On MS NOW today, columnist Philip Bump broke down when talking about the shooting of Renee Nicole Good yesterday in Minneapolis. "I have a six year old," he said. "And…seeing the image of the stuffed animals in the glove compartment of her car—really emotional for me and…what I take away from this is, for me that's the thing that stands out: that this was a family that could have been like mine."

Bump went on to emphasize that "there are a lot of situations, a lot of incidents that have involved ICE, have involved the government over the course of the past thirteen months in which there is resonance for other families in similar ways," but what he hit on in his first reaction to Good's killing was the one the administration must fear most of all. Good was a white, suburban mother, whose ex-husband told reporters she was a Christian stay-at-home mom, and Bump is a white man.

President Donald J. Trump's people see that demographic as their base. If it turns on Trump, they are politically finished, as finished as elite southern enslavers were when Harriet Beecher Stowe reminded American mothers of the fragility of their own childrens' lives to condemn the sale of Black children; as finished as the second Ku Klux Klan was when its leader kidnapped, raped, and murdered 28-year-old Madge Oberholtzer; as finished as the white segregationists were when white supremacists murdered four little girls in church in 1963.

Evidence that President Donald J. Trump has sexually abused children would likely be enough to crater his political support from this group, making it no accident that the administration is openly flouting the law that required the full release of the Epstein Files by December 19, 2025. The Department of Justice has released less than 1% of those files, and many of them were so heavily redacted as to be useless. In a court filing on Monday, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said that "substantial work remains to be done" before it can release them all.

But there is no hiding the murder of Renee Good, captured on video by several witnesses as it was. And so the Trump administration is working desperately to smear Good and to convince the public that, contrary to widespread video evidence, the federal agent put in place by the Trump regime shot her in self-defense.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS), DHS secretary Kristi Noem, and Trump himself have all insisted that their false narrative is true. Media Matters for America compiled a timeline showing how the Fox News Channel first told viewers that Good had tried to ram officers whose vehicle was stuck in a snowbank, then moderated their language as video appeared, and then, by the evening, parroted the administration's talking points.

Today, in a press conference on the shooting, Vice President J.D. Vance made even more extreme statements, claiming—all evidence to the contrary—that the woman shot in Minneapolis was part of a "left wing network" and that "nobody debates" that she "aimed her car at a law enforcement officer and pressed on the accelerator." In fact, among those who "debate" Vance's version of events are the journalists at the New York Times, who today published a slow-motion analysis that demonstrated conclusively that the vehicle was turning away from the officer when he opened fire.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt increased the attack on Good even more today by saying: "The deadly incident that took place in Minnesota yesterday occurred as a result of a larger, sinister left-wing movement that has spread across our country, where our brave men and women of federal law enforcement are under organized attack."

The administration appears to be trying to make sure their narrative will get an official stamp of approval by silencing a real investigation. Today, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA), a statewide criminal investigative bureau in the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, said the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has shut its officials out of the investigation into Good's death. The FBI will no longer allow the BCA to "have access to the case materials, scene evidence or investigative interviews necessary to complete a thorough and independent investigation." The BCA has, it said, "reluctantly withdrawn from the investigation."

Law professor Steve Vladeck commented sarcastically: "This is *definitely* how you behave when you're trying to bring every resource to bear, rather than trying to cover up the unlawful behavior of your own personnel."

The FBI is housed within the Department of Justice (DOJ), which is run by Trump loyalists Bondi and Blanche, and as Vladeck suggests, there is appropriate concern that it will not conduct a fair investigation. In an illustration of how Trump has tried to stack the DOJ, today U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield ruled that John Sarcone, Trump's temporary nominee as acting U.S. attorney for the Northern District of New York, does not hold that position lawfully. For Sarcone, as for four other U.S. attorneys, Trump has ignored the law to keep his loyalists in control of key Department of Justice offices, where they have targeted people Trump considers enemies. Although judges have said five of Trump-appointed U.S. attorneys are in office illegally, at least three have refused to step down.

Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty issued a statement saying that her office is "exploring all options" to ensure that a state level investigation of the shooting of Renee Nicole Good continues.

Today Trump appeared to settle into his new role as an American dictator. He announced plans to make the ballroom for which he bulldozed the East Wing of the White House even bigger: despite a longstanding norm that additions to the White House—the People's House—have a lower profile than the main building, Jonathan Edwards and Dan Diamond of the Washington Post reported today that Trump is now planning for his ballroom to be as tall as the White House. Trump's architect also said they are considering adding a one-story addition to the West Wing colonnade that runs alongside what used to be the Rose Garden. White House director of management and administration Josh Fisher also said that administration officials plan to renovate Lafayette Square, north of the White House.

And Trump told New York Times reporters David E. Sanger, Tyler Pager, Katie Rogers, and Zolan Kanno-Youngs that as commander-in-chief, he has only one limit on his power: "My own morality. My own mind. It's the only thing that can stop me." He claimed he gets to determine what is legal under international law, and seemed to stretch that authority to domestic affairs, too, saying that he was already considering getting around a possible decision by the Supreme Court that his tariffs were unconstitutional by simply calling them licensing fees and that he could invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy troops in the U.S. if he "felt the need to do it."

Meanwhile, Hamed Aleaziz and Madeleine Ngo of the New York Times reported that the Trump administration is sending more than 100 Customs and Border Protection agents and officers from Chicago to Minnesota after yesterday's shooting.

This afternoon, federal immigration agents shot and wounded two people in Portland, Oregon. According to Claire Rush and Gene Johnson of the Associated Press, the shooting took place outside a hospital where the two were in a car. Portland mayor Keith Wilson and the City Council asked ICE to end operations in the city during a full investigation of the incident.

Democrats have spoken out loudly against Trump's grab for dictatorial powers since he took office, and today some Republicans began to push back as well.

Representatives Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Thomas Massie (R-KY), the leading sponsors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, asked U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer to appoint "a Special Master and an Independent Monitor to compel" the DOJ to produce the Epstein files as the law requires. "Put simply," they wrote, "the DOJ cannot be trusted with making mandatory disclosures under the Act…. [W]e do not believe the DOJ will produce the records that are required by the Act."

Last month, House Democrats launched a discharge petition to force a vote to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits for three years. Frustrated that Speaker Johnson would not take up such a measure, four Republicans signed the petition to force it to the floor. Today, seventeen Republicans joined the Democrats to pass the measure by a vote of 230–196. It now heads to the Senate.

The Senate also pushed back today.

Senators voted to advance a bill that would stop the Trump administration from additional attacks on Venezuela without congressional approval. The vote was 52–47 with five Republicans joining all the Democrats to move the measure forward. Republicans killed a similar measure in November, but Trump's enormously unpopular incursion into Venezuela and threats against Greenland prompted five Republicans to reassert congressional authority over military action. CNN called it "a notable rebuke of the president."

The five Republicans voting for the bill were Susan Collins of Maine, Josh Hawley of Missouri, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Todd Young of Indiana. Immediately, Trump posted on social media that the five "should never be elected to office again." By reasserting the power of Congress, he wrote, they were "attempting to take away our Powers to fight and defend the United States of America."

The Senate also unanimously approved a resolution to hang a plaque honoring the police who protected the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. In March 2022, Congress passed a law approving the plaque and requiring that it be installed, but House speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has refused and the Department of Justice has complained that because the plaque lists departments and not individual officers, it does not comply with the law.

On this year's fifth anniversary of the January 6 attack, the Trump administration blamed the police officers themselves for starting the insurrection, making the Senate's vote appear to be a pointed rebuke of the president. In response to Trump's calling the rioters "patriotic protesters" retiring senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) called the January 6 rioters "thousands of thugs" according to reporter Scott MacFarlane.

Senate majority leader John Thune (R-SD) has agreed to let the plaque hang in the Senate until the Architect of the Capitol—the federal agency that maintains, operates, and preserves the U.S. Capitol—determines its permanent location.

Today, as there were yesterday, there were protests against ICE around the country. Tonight, as there were last night, there are vigils for Renee Good.


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Juan Matute
CCRC