Naturalization approvals across the United States have fallen roughly 50 percent from their 2025 peak after the Trump administration imposed tougher screening requirements, reinstated a harder civics exam, and ordered neighborhood investigations of applicants, changes that amount to the most aggressive tightening of the legal immigration pipeline in years.
The numbers tell a striking story. At the high point of 2025, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services approved 88,488 applications in a single month, the largest figure since USCIS began tracking month-by-month naturalization data in 2022. By January of this year, that number had collapsed to just 32,862, the lowest USCIS has ever recorded.
Applications tell a similar story. In October of 2025, 169,159 foreigners applied for citizenship. By the end of November, the figure had tumbled to 41,478. The message reaching prospective applicants is clear: the days of rubber-stamped approvals are over.
USCIS spokesman Matthew Tragesser told NPR that the Trump administration is taking a more serious look at applicants who live in high-risk countries and that additional screening has been implemented across the board. He laid out the specific measures in plain terms:
"This includes reimplementing the 2020 naturalization civics test for 2025, strengthened English language requirements, screening social media for anti-American activities, and restoring neighborhood investigations to ensure applicants demonstrate good moral character and an attachment to the Constitution."
Each of those changes reverses a pattern that critics on the right had long warned about, a system that moved applicants through on volume rather than merit. The 2020 civics test, introduced during Trump's first term, was replaced under the Biden administration with a version widely regarded as easier. Its return signals that the current administration views the citizenship process not as a formality but as a gatekeeping function.
Tragesser made the administration's posture explicit in a second statement to NPR:
"USCIS will not take shortcuts in the adjudications process."
That single sentence captures the philosophical shift. For years, immigration hawks argued that the federal bureaucracy prioritized throughput, processing as many cases as possible, as fast as possible, over the kind of careful vetting that citizenship is supposed to require. The Trump administration is now betting that slower, more rigorous adjudication will produce better outcomes for the country, even if the raw numbers drop.
One detail worth noting: during the first few months of Trump's second term, the administration actually approved a record-high number of naturalizations, according to NPR's reporting of the USCIS data. That surge likely reflected a backlog of cases already deep in the pipeline, applications filed and processed under prior rules that simply hadn't reached final approval yet.
Once the new screening protocols took hold, the numbers fell fast. The swing from peak to trough, 88,488 approvals in one month down to 32,862, represents a drop of more than 60 percent. The "roughly 50 percent" figure cited in the broader data likely reflects a comparison across a wider timeframe, but the direction is unmistakable.
The Trump administration has also pointed to what it describes as a huge decline in illegal migration alongside the legal immigration slowdown, though specific figures on that front were not provided in the USCIS data. The broader enforcement posture, from the push for the SAVE Act to tighter border operations, has clearly shaped the environment in which legal applicants are making their decisions.
Two of the new measures deserve closer attention because they represent a qualitative change, not just a quantitative one.
Screening social media for "anti-American activities" means USCIS officers are now reviewing what applicants post online before granting citizenship. The policy raises obvious questions, what qualifies as "anti-American," and who decides?, but the underlying logic is straightforward. If someone seeking to become an American citizen is publicly hostile to the country's values or institutions, that ought to be relevant to the decision.
Restoring neighborhood investigations is a throwback to an older model of immigration enforcement. Under this approach, USCIS officers verify that applicants actually live where they claim to live and that their conduct in their communities reflects the "good moral character" the law requires. It is labor-intensive. It is slow. And it is exactly the kind of ground-level vetting that a high-volume processing system tends to abandon.
The strengthened English language requirements round out the picture. Fluency in the national language has always been a statutory prerequisite for naturalization, but enforcement varied. Tightening the standard sends a signal about what assimilation means in practice, not just a box to check, but a real expectation.
None of this is happening in a vacuum. The immigration debate has become the defining fault line of American politics, and the Trump administration's moves on legal immigration are as much a policy statement as a political one. Trump-backed candidates have continued to win elections in part because the base demands exactly this kind of action, not just border walls and deportation flights, but structural changes to the way the system processes legal entrants.
Democrats, for their part, have focused their opposition on other fronts. Some have filed lawsuits to block Trump executive orders on election procedures, while others have tried to frame the immigration crackdown as xenophobic or economically self-defeating. But the numbers from USCIS suggest the administration is not backing down.
The open questions are real. What specific countries does USCIS consider "high-risk"? What exact social media content triggers a denial? How many of the declined applications would have been approved under the prior administration's standards? The USCIS data, as reported by NPR, does not answer those questions. Neither does the spokesman's statement.
But the direction of policy is not ambiguous. The Trump administration has decided that fewer, better-vetted new citizens is preferable to a system that maximized volume. Whether you call that reform or restriction depends on your priors. What you cannot call it is accidental.
The contrast with the Biden era is worth remembering. Under the previous administration, the emphasis was on processing speed, application accessibility, and expanding the pipeline. Trump's political opponents fought him at every turn during his first term, and the bureaucracy largely reverted to a volume-first model the moment he left office. Now the pendulum has swung back, hard.
The USCIS figures, tracked monthly since 2022, give a clear picture of the approval trend. They do not, however, tell us how many of the applications that were denied or delayed under the new screening would have been problematic. That is the data point immigration hawks want and critics will demand.
If the tougher vetting catches applicants who lied about their residency, posted extremist content online, or failed to demonstrate genuine attachment to the Constitution, the policy will have justified itself on its own terms. If the slowdown is primarily a function of bureaucratic bottlenecks and staffing shortfalls dressed up as rigor, that is a different story.
For now, the administration's position is unequivocal. USCIS will not take shortcuts. The civics test is harder. The English requirement is stricter. Officers are checking social media. Neighborhood investigators are knocking on doors. And while some in the opposition prefer to look the other way, the numbers reflect a system that has fundamentally changed how it decides who gets to call themselves American.
Citizenship is supposed to mean something. A government that acts like it does is not restricting immigration, it is restoring the standard.
A federal grand jury has indicted 16-year-old Timothy Hudson on charges of first-degree murder and aggravated sexual abuse in the death of his 18-year-old stepsister, Anna Kepner, who was found dead aboard the Carnival Horizon cruise ship last November. Hudson will be tried as an adult in federal court, a decision that carries the possibility of decades in prison for a crime that unfolded in a shared cabin on a family vacation.
The case, which had been sealed for months while federal officials refused to confirm or deny that a prosecution was underway, became public when the U.S. Department of Justice announced the charges on April 13. The indictment ends a period of unusual silence from investigators that left Anna's family, and the public, waiting for answers about how an 18-year-old high school senior ended up dead on a six-day Caribbean cruise.
Anna Kepner was pronounced dead at 11:17 a.m. on November 7, 2025, while the 133,000-ton Carnival Horizon was sailing from Mexico back to Florida. Her cause of death was mechanical asphyxia. A law enforcement source later told AP News the death was caused by a "bar hold." Her body was discovered concealed under a bed in the Deck 8 cabin she shared with Hudson and a 14-year-old half-brother.
The night before her death, Anna had gone to bed early, telling her family at dinner that she was feeling unwell. The next morning, the two boys in her cabin went to breakfast. When the family realized Anna was missing, a cleaning crew found her body. Christopher Kepner, Anna's 41-year-old father, rushed to the cabin after a medical emergency was announced on the ship.
When the Horizon docked in Miami on November 8, FBI agents swarmed the vessel. They interviewed the family and scoured CCTV footage. The Daily Mail was the first outlet to report that Anna's body had been found stuffed under the bed in the cabin she was sharing with her stepbrother.
Hudson was charged as a juvenile in federal court on February 2, 2026, and arrested the following day. He pleaded not guilty. Because the death occurred in international waters, the case falls under federal jurisdiction, a fact that shaped everything from the investigation's pace to the secrecy surrounding it.
For months, all records remained under seal. Hudson made several closed-door court appearances, with journalists barred because of his age. As recently as early February, the Daily Mail reported a secret court appearance. Federal officials consistently declined to confirm or deny the prosecution's existence, a posture that one legal expert attributed to the tangled family dynamics at the heart of the case.
Defense attorney Donna Rotunno, commenting on the prolonged silence, told Fox News that the overlap between the victim's family and the suspect's family created an unusual legal situation.
"It is odd we haven't heard anything. But I think there's a reason for it. When you're dealing with essentially one family, authorities have to be careful about what they put out there."
Rotunno also noted that mechanical asphyxia "could be argued as accidental or something that went too far," complicating the investigation's path toward charges. That ambiguity may explain why it took prosecutors months to bring the case to a grand jury, and why they ultimately chose to pursue both murder and aggravated sexual abuse charges.
The blended family's situation was already fraught. Anna's father, Christopher Kepner, had married Shauntel Hudson, Timothy's mother. Timothy and Anna lived under the same roof in Titusville, Florida, along with the 14-year-old half-brother. When federal authorities are slow to act in cases involving serious violence, the question of whether a suspect will actually face trial weighs heavily on victims' families and the public alike.
The charges did not emerge in a vacuum. Before the indictment, troubling claims about Hudson's behavior toward Anna had already surfaced publicly. Steven Westin, the father of Anna's ex-boyfriend, told Inside Edition that the stepbrother had been fixated on the cheerleader.
"He's like infatuated, attracted to her like crazy. He always wanted to date her."
Westin also claimed Anna was afraid of Hudson. The New York Post reported that Westin alleged Hudson carried a large knife and that the ex-boyfriend once witnessed Hudson get on top of Anna while she was sleeping during a FaceTime call. These are allegations from a single source and have not been confirmed by investigators, but they paint a picture of warning signs that, if true, went unaddressed before the family boarded the Carnival Horizon together.
The FBI questioned Hudson after Anna's body was found. He insisted he could not remember what took place in the cabin. When a Daily Mail reporter later approached him at a rural Florida home where he was living with a relative, his only response was brief.
"I'd rather not talk," Hudson said.
The case's domestic backdrop grew even more complicated in the weeks after Anna's death. Shauntel Hudson's ex-husband, 37-year-old Thomas Hudson, sought emergency custody of their young daughter. In court filings tied to that custody dispute, both Shauntel and Thomas referred to their son Timothy as a "suspect," with one filing describing Anna's death as a "suspected murder." The proceedings took place on December 5 in Brevard County, Florida, with Christopher Kepner present to support Shauntel.
Thomas Hudson accused Shauntel of taking the children on the cruise without his permission and allowing older children to drink alcohol on the trip. Shauntel denied the allegations. A Brevard County judge ruled that the young daughter was not in danger and could remain with Shauntel and Christopher, so long as Timothy was living elsewhere.
Timothy Hudson has since been allowed to live with an uncle while wearing a GPS ankle monitor. The arrangement means a teenager facing first-degree murder charges is residing outside a detention facility, a fact that may unsettle anyone who believes accountability should begin at the point of indictment, not after conviction. When suspects in high-profile federal cases are allowed pre-trial freedom, the public rightly asks whether the system is taking the threat seriously.
The decision to try Hudson as an adult carries significant consequences. If convicted, he faces decades in prison. But because he was a juvenile at the time of the alleged killing, he cannot face the death penalty. The 2012 Supreme Court ruling that deemed mandatory life-without-parole sentences for juveniles unconstitutional further limits the sentencing range.
That legal reality means even a first-degree murder conviction may not result in the kind of sentence many Americans would expect for a crime of this nature. The aggravated sexual abuse charge adds gravity to the prosecution's case, but the juvenile-status protections remain in effect regardless of the charges' severity.
The Washington Times detailed the timeline of the investigation, noting that prosecutors moved from sealed juvenile charges in February to the public announcement of the adult indictment on April 13, a span of more than two months during which the public knew almost nothing about the status of the case.
For a family that has already endured the worst, the legal process is only beginning. Christopher Kepner and Shauntel Hudson released a joint statement addressing Anna's death and the charges against Timothy.
"The loss of our daughter is a pain that will never fully heal. She was taken from us in a violent and senseless way, and our family has been permanently changed."
They continued: "We believe in accountability and in the importance of justice being carried out. Our daughter deserves justice, and her life deserves to be honored through a full and fair legal process."
Anna Kepner was an 18-year-old high school senior and cheerleader from Titusville, Florida. She had plans to join the U.S. Navy or become a K9 handler with the Titusville Police Department. Her family described her as bubbly. She was on a family cruise, the kind of trip that is supposed to be a reward, a memory, a break from ordinary life.
Instead, she never came home. And the person charged with taking her life is someone who sat across from her at the dinner table the night before. Cases like this, where the courts must weigh the gravity of the crime against the status of the defendant, test whether the justice system can deliver outcomes that match the severity of what was lost.
Several open questions remain. The exact evidence supporting the aggravated sexual abuse charge has not been made public. The full text of the sealed indictment has not been released. The federal court handling the case has not been publicly identified in available reporting. And the question of what, if anything, could have prevented Anna's death, given the behavioral allegations that preceded the cruise, has no official answer.
Anna Kepner's parents asked for accountability. The grand jury delivered an indictment. Now the system has to deliver something harder: a trial and a verdict that honors the life of an 18-year-old who deserved to come home.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is building a governing record that reads like a checklist of progressive experiments, sanctuary enforcement, policing overhauls, racial equity mandates, and now, according to commentary on The Alex Marlow Show, a proposal to inject race into the city's tax code. The question is no longer whether Mamdani will push too far. It's whether anyone with a tax bill will stick around long enough to find out.
Emma-Jo Morris, appearing on the Saturday broadcast of the Breitbart-hosted program, zeroed in on the mayor's latest policy direction and the political fallout it could trigger, not just for Mamdani, but for New York Governor Kathy Hochul, who presides over a state already hemorrhaging high earners.
Morris framed the consequences in blunt terms:
"The biggest victim of this policy is going to be Kathy Hochul when the last living taxpayer just hits the road, and she has to look at this guy and say you had to make a race-based tax system."
That single sentence captures the bind New York's political class has created for itself. A city that already taxes income, property, and commerce at some of the steepest rates in the country now faces a mayor who wants to layer racial classifications on top of the code. For taxpayers who have spent years weighing the cost of staying, this could be the final push toward the exits.
The tax proposal does not exist in a vacuum. Mamdani has governed through sweeping executive action since taking office, stacking one ideological initiative on top of another with little apparent concern for the practical consequences.
His administration has already pushed tax hikes while framing policy around race, signaling that the current proposal is an escalation of an existing pattern rather than a sudden turn.
On immigration, Mamdani signed an executive order reaffirming New York City's sanctuary status and barring ICE from entering city property without a judicial warrant. The Washington Examiner reported that the order directs city agencies to audit their policies involving immigration authorities and creates a committee to respond to immigration-related situations in the city. Mamdani said the order would "protect New Yorkers' private data from being unlawfully accessed by the federal government."
That executive action placed New York squarely in opposition to federal enforcement priorities, a move that fits a broader pattern among blue-state leaders trying to limit local cooperation with immigration authorities.
The mayor has also launched a citywide racial equity plan that prompted the Department of Justice to signal a potential legal review. When the federal government starts asking questions about a city program's legality, most elected officials recalibrate. Mamdani doubled down.
The people who fund New York's government, small business owners, professionals, retirees on fixed incomes, families paying property taxes in the outer boroughs, do not appear anywhere in Mamdani's policy calculus. His agenda treats the tax base not as a constituency to serve but as a resource to extract from, with racial categories determining who pays what.
Morris's warning on The Alex Marlow Show pointed directly at this dynamic. A race-based tax system is not just constitutionally dubious. It is a signal to every productive resident that the city views them through an ideological lens first and as citizens second.
New York has watched this story before. High taxes and hostile governance drove residents and businesses to Florida, Texas, and the Carolinas throughout the pandemic years. The difference now is that Mamdani is adding a new variable, explicit racial sorting, to a fiscal environment that was already driving people out.
Meanwhile, Mamdani has shown no hesitation about spending. His administration created a $1.1 billion safety office designed to centralize policing alternatives under the deputy mayor, a massive new bureaucratic layer funded by the same taxpayers he now proposes to classify by race.
Morris's commentary identified Governor Hochul as the real political casualty. And the logic holds. Hochul does not control New York City's tax code, but she owns the state's fiscal trajectory. Every resident who leaves the five boroughs takes state income tax revenue with them.
New York State already operates with one of the highest combined tax burdens in the country. The governor has spent years trying to balance progressive demands from the city with the economic reality that high earners have options. A mayor who racializes the tax code makes that balancing act nearly impossible.
Hochul would be forced into an uncomfortable position: either publicly oppose Mamdani and alienate the progressive wing of her own party, or stay silent and watch the revenue base erode further. Morris suggested the governor will eventually have to confront Mamdani directly, and by then, the damage may already be done.
Mamdani's governing style has already created friction well beyond City Hall. His trip to Washington with a $21 billion wish list for the Trump administration illustrated both his ambition and his disconnect from fiscal reality.
A tax system that classifies residents by race raises immediate equal-protection concerns. The Fourteenth Amendment does not contain an exception for progressive cities, and any scheme that assigns tax obligations based on racial identity would face near-certain legal challenge.
Yet the details of Mamdani's proposal remain thin. The specific policy Morris referenced on The Alex Marlow Show was not laid out in full, and the mayor's office has not provided the kind of legislative text that would allow a precise legal analysis. What is clear is the direction: race as a factor in taxation.
That direction alone is enough to rattle the business community, the real estate market, and anyone making long-term financial plans in New York City. Investors and employers do not wait for final legislation to make relocation decisions. They read signals. And Mamdani is broadcasting loud and clear.
His executive order requiring judicial warrants for ICE already demonstrated his willingness to use mayoral power to override federal priorities. A race-based tax code would represent a far more radical use of that same instinct, turning the machinery of city government into a tool for ideological redistribution.
The people who will bear the cost of this experiment are not the ones making policy. They are the small landlords, the bodega owners, the nurses and teachers and electricians who cannot relocate their lives on short notice. They are the retirees who bought homes in Queens forty years ago and now face a government that wants to sort their obligations by skin color.
The wealthy will leave. They always do. They have accountants and second homes and the mobility that comes with capital. The people left behind will inherit a shrinking tax base, rising rates, and a city government more interested in ideological projects than in keeping the lights on.
Morris's point on The Alex Marlow Show was not complicated. It was arithmetic. You cannot build a tax system around racial categories and expect productive citizens to accept it quietly. Some will fight it in court. Many more will simply leave.
New York has survived a lot, fiscal crises, crime waves, pandemics, political dysfunction. But it has never tried to tell its residents that their tax bill depends on their race. If Mamdani gets his way, the city may discover that even New Yorkers have a breaking point.
President Donald Trump has discussed granting sweeping preemptive pardons to members of his administration before leaving office, a move that would shield aides and allies from investigations Democrats have openly promised to pursue. The Wall Street Journal reported the discussions, which include the possibility of issuing anticipatory or even blanket pardons before any formal charges are brought.
No specific names have surfaced publicly. No pardon documents have been drafted or issued, as far as current reporting shows. But the conversations are real, and the political context makes the reasoning plain enough.
Democrats have spent months signaling they intend to scrutinize Trump's administration the moment he leaves the White House. Party leaders and allied groups have pointed to a range of issues they say warrant further investigation. Some Democratic lawmakers and legal analysts have questioned U.S. strikes on Iranian infrastructure, arguing that certain actions could raise legal concerns. Trump rejected those criticisms, insisting the military campaign is necessary and lawful.
If the idea of preemptive pardons sounds familiar, it should. Before Trump returned to office, Biden's own White House was openly weighing the same tool, for the same reason, in reverse. National Review reported that press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to rule out preemptive pardons for Biden allies, even though none of the people under discussion were under investigation or facing charges at the time.
The names floated by Biden's team were not obscure. Former Rep. Liz Cheney, Sen.-elect Adam Schiff, and Dr. Anthony Fauci were all reportedly under consideration, Just the News reported, citing Politico. The rationale, according to Biden advisers, was that Trump's incoming team could pursue investigations or prosecutions against his critics.
Jean-Pierre framed the urgency in stark terms. "Recently announced Trump appointees for law enforcement have said on the campaign that they were out for retribution," she said. She also cited "changed circumstances" when explaining Biden's decision to pardon his own son, Hunter Biden, a pardon that covered an almost eleven-year period from 2014 to 2024.
That timeline matters. Biden's sweeping pardon of Hunter Biden set a concrete precedent for broad, time-spanning clemency actions. If a president can pardon a family member for conduct spanning more than a decade, much of it not yet charged, the legal architecture for doing the same for administration officials is already in place.
The political irony here is thick. Democrats who now object to the idea of Trump issuing preemptive pardons were, just months ago, urging Biden to do exactly the same thing. Sen. Ed Markey said publicly that if "revenge" was Trump's intention, he would recommend Biden provide preemptive pardons, "because that's really what our country is going to need." Rep. Brendan Boyle went further: "This is no hypothetical threat. The time for cautious restraint is over." Both statements were reported by the Washington Examiner.
Trump himself pushed the issue into the open well before his second term began. In a December 2024 appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press," he said Biden could pardon Democrats and January 6 Committee members, and suggested maybe he should.
"Biden can give them a pardon if he wants to. And maybe he should."
That comment, reported by Breitbart, came alongside Trump's accusation that the January 6 Committee had deleted and destroyed more than one hundred files before Republicans took control of the House. He called the destruction "illegal and unprecedented."
White House lawyers under Biden reportedly studied preemptive pardons for a wide circle of allies, including Cheney, Pelosi, Kinzinger, Gen. Mark Milley, FBI Director Christopher Wray, DOJ lawyers, and even members of the Biden family. The groundwork was laid. Whether Biden ultimately acted on every name is a separate question, but the principle was established, by Democrats, before Trump ever had to consider the same move for his own people.
Legal experts cited by the Journal described the potential move as "largely unprecedented." That framing deserves some scrutiny. Presidential pardon power under Article II of the Constitution is broad and has been exercised aggressively by presidents of both parties. Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon before any charges were filed. Biden's pardon of Hunter Biden covered uncharged conduct. The mechanism is well-established; the scale Trump is reportedly considering is what would be new.
There remains genuine uncertainty about whether a preemptive pardon for individuals not currently facing criminal charges would survive legal challenge. Just the News noted that question explicitly. But the Biden precedent, pardoning Hunter Biden for a sweeping range of conduct over more than a decade, moved the goalposts considerably.
Trump has already issued clemency to large numbers of allies and supporters during his current term, often bypassing traditional Justice Department vetting processes. That pattern, reported by the Journal, suggests the administrative machinery for broad pardons already exists within this White House. The question is scope, not capability.
Meanwhile, Democrats continue to position themselves for post-presidency confrontation. The same party that demanded Trump's Cabinet invoke the 25th Amendment over his Iran remarks is now signaling it will pursue his aides through investigations and potential prosecutions the moment he steps aside.
Trump allies see the pardon discussions as a reasonable response to what they describe as politically driven probes. The president himself has framed the potential investigations as politically motivated prosecutions. Whether one agrees with that characterization depends largely on whether one trusts the institutions preparing to launch those probes.
The track record offers reasons for skepticism. Democrats have spent years weaponizing oversight and investigative authority against political opponents. Rep. Eric Swalwell, for instance, threatened to sue over the release of Chinese spy files after years of demanding transparency on Trump, a contradiction that captures the selective nature of the left's commitment to accountability.
The broader political environment reinforces the point. Trump-backed candidates continue to win elections, as Clay Fuller's Georgia special election victory demonstrated. Democratic leadership, meanwhile, faces internal fractures, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez drew backlash from her own socialist base over moderate endorsements. A party struggling to hold itself together may not be the most credible vehicle for post-presidency legal crusades.
Several important details remain unknown. Which specific administration members are being considered for pardons? Which investigations are being anticipated? Were any pardon documents drafted? The Journal's reporting established that discussions are happening but did not name individual beneficiaries or describe the precise legal mechanisms under review.
It also remains unclear how far Trump would go. A narrow set of pardons for officials involved in specific policy decisions, like the Iran strikes Democrats have questioned, would be one thing. A sweeping blanket covering the entire senior staff would be another. The political and legal calculus differs sharply depending on the answer.
Strip away the outrage, and the underlying dynamic is straightforward. Democrats built the playbook for preemptive pardons when they feared Trump would investigate their allies. Biden's team studied it, floated names publicly, and Biden himself issued the broadest personal pardon in modern memory for his own son. Now Trump is reportedly considering the same tool to protect his people from the same kind of politically charged legal exposure.
The constitutional authority is clear. The precedent was set, by the other side. And the threat Trump's aides face is not hypothetical. Democrats have stated their intentions openly and repeatedly.
When the left built the weapon, they assumed only their side would ever pick it up. That assumption, like so many others, was wrong.
Ivanka Trump said she was at the family's Bedminster, New Jersey, estate on July 13, 2024, when commotion broke out and the televisions switched on, and she watched, almost in real time, as a gunman opened fire on her father at a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania. In a new interview with Steven Bartlett on "The Diary of a CEO," the president's daughter described the moment in detail, saying she saw the chaos unfold before Donald Trump had even stood back up from the stage.
Two of her children were with her. Her first instinct, she said, was to turn them away from the screen.
The interview, which aired Thursday, offered the most personal account Ivanka Trump has given of how the near-fatal shooting registered inside the Trump family. Thomas Matthew Crooks, a 20-year-old, fired multiple shots into the crowd at the Butler Farm Show grounds, injuring the then-presidential candidate, killing one audience member, and critically wounding others. Secret Service agents swarmed the stage. The gunman was killed. And Ivanka Trump, roughly 300 miles away, said she somehow knew her father would survive.
Ivanka Trump told Bartlett she saw the shooting before the outcome was clear, before her father rose, before the now-iconic fist pump, before the Secret Service escorted him off the stage.
"It was almost real-time, it was before he had stood back up that I had seen what was transpiring, and two of my children were there, so my first reaction was to turn them away."
She called the experience "incredibly difficult." But she also said something that will resonate with the millions of Americans who watched that footage and felt the same gut-level conviction: she knew, in the moment, that her father was going to be fine.
"Interestingly, I knew real-time in that moment that he was fine. I just knew that it wasn't his time."
She saw her father later that night when he returned from the hospital to Bedminster. The name of the hospital was not disclosed. What mattered to her, she said, was that he came back at all.
Ivanka Trump has previously opened up about personal trials, her mother Ivana's death, her husband Jared Kushner's cancer scare, and she told Bartlett that the Butler shooting deepened a belief she already held: that life is finite and precious.
When Bartlett asked whether the experience left her with a darker view of society, Ivanka Trump pushed back. She acknowledged the "sickness" behind the act but said she refused to let it define her outlook.
"I don't allow it to, what does that accomplish, being negative towards the world? I think that brings more negativity to the world."
She went further, saying forgiveness, though difficult in this context, was necessary. And she framed her father's survival not as a political talking point but as a family blessing.
"His living was a blessing, so I could look at what happened and be rightfully traumatized by the experience, and nobody could really argue with that, but you have to move through it. On the opposite side of that is the fact that he's with us today, that he didn't die, that my father is alive and that is an extraordinary blessing for me as his daughter."
That framing, choosing gratitude over bitterness, runs counter to the political culture that surrounded the shooting from the start. Within hours of Butler, the debate had shifted to blame, motive, and partisan recrimination. Ivanka Trump's comments, nearly two years later, cut through that noise with something simpler: a daughter who watched her father nearly die on live television and chose to see the outcome as grace.
It was not the first time the Trump family faced a security threat of that magnitude. The Secret Service has investigated gunfire near the White House while Donald Trump was inside during his first term, a reminder that the risks surrounding this family are not abstract.
Ivanka Trump praised the Secret Service in the interview, calling them "the best in the world" at protecting her family. But the agency's performance on July 13, 2024, has been the subject of intense scrutiny. Six Secret Service agents were suspended in July 2025 in connection with the security lapses that day.
President Trump himself addressed the matter that same month, telling Fox News he was "satisfied" with the briefing he received about the lapses, while also acknowledging that "there were mistakes made." The specific failures that led to the suspensions have not been publicly detailed.
Ivanka Trump also acknowledged the broader reality that public service in America now carries a correlation with violence. She did not shy away from it.
"The fact that there is a correlation between service and violence is terrible in and of itself, but that's the world we live in so I have to acknowledge that reality and defend my family as best I can and make sure they're protected."
That statement deserves more attention than it will likely get. A former president's daughter, someone who spent years in the White House and watched her father face relentless political opposition, is saying plainly that political violence is a feature of American public life, not an aberration. She is not wrong.
Ivanka Trump's interview this week is the most detailed personal account she has given, but it was not her first public response. In the immediate aftermath of the Butler shooting, she issued a message expressing love for her father and gratitude for the emergency response.
As the New York Post reported at the time, she thanked people for their prayers, not just for her father, but for the other victims of what she called "senseless violence in Butler, Pennsylvania." She also praised the Secret Service and law enforcement for their "quick and decisive actions."
The shooting occurred just one day before the second anniversary of Ivana Trump's death. Just The News noted that Ivanka said at the time she believed her late mother was watching over her father that day. The family had already been through loss. Butler nearly added to it.
Ivana Trump's passing in 2022 remains a touchstone for the family. Her iconic Upper East Side townhouse sold for $14 million after steep price cuts, closing a chapter in the family's New York history.
Donald Trump took office for his second term as the 47th president on January 20, 2025. Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner, and their son Joseph departed from the East Front of the United States Capitol after the inauguration. The family that nearly lost its patriarch six months earlier stood together on the steps of the building he had been elected to lead.
Ivanka Trump did not assign partisan blame in the interview. She did not need to. The facts of the Butler shooting speak for themselves: a 20-year-old fired multiple shots at a presidential candidate at a public rally, and the security apparatus charged with preventing exactly that outcome failed to stop it before a bullet grazed the candidate and killed a bystander.
The political environment leading up to July 13, 2024, was saturated with rhetoric that treated Donald Trump not merely as a political opponent but as an existential threat to democracy, language that, whatever its intent, created a permission structure for the unstable. Ivanka Trump's observation about the "correlation between service and violence" lands differently when you consider the years of overheated commentary that preceded the Butler rally.
None of that excuses the shooter. But the institutions and political figures who spent years escalating the temperature have never fully reckoned with what happened in that Pennsylvania field. Six Secret Service agents were suspended. The political class moved on. Ivanka Trump, apparently, has not, though she has chosen to process it through faith and family rather than fury.
The media, for its part, has shown far more interest in policing the Trump family's public image, scolding Ivanka Trump for wearing a cream suit in a holiday post, for instance, than in sustaining serious coverage of how a presidential candidate came within inches of being killed on American soil.
The interview raises questions it does not answer. The specific security lapses that led to six suspensions remain undisclosed. The details of the July 2025 briefing that President Trump called "satisfying", despite acknowledging mistakes, have not been made public. And the broader question of how a 20-year-old with a rifle reached a firing position at a secured campaign event has never been answered to the satisfaction of the public.
Ivanka Trump's comments are a personal account, not an investigative one. But they serve as a reminder that behind the political spectacle of the Butler shooting, there is a family that watched it happen, and a daughter who saw the worst moment of her life play out on a television screen before her father had even gotten back to his feet.
She said she chose to see the positive outcome. That is her right. But the rest of the country still deserves a full accounting of how it nearly went the other way.
The man charged with killing a 23-year-old Ukrainian immigrant on a Charlotte, North Carolina, light rail train last August will not face trial any time soon. Decarlos Dejuan Brown Jr., 34, has been deemed "incapable to proceed" after a psychiatric evaluation, and his defense attorney is now asking for a six-month delay in the state case, a request prosecutors did not oppose.
The finding was disclosed Tuesday in a motion filed in Mecklenburg Superior Court by Brown's state public defender, Daniel Roberts. Brown underwent the evaluation at Central Regional Hospital in December 2025, Newsmax reported. Roberts cited Brown's current status in federal custody as an obstacle to the competency hearings required under North Carolina state law and requested a six-month continuance of a scheduled Rule 24 hearing, a key proceeding in death penalty-eligible cases.
Iryna Zarutska fled the war in Ukraine and was building a new life in Charlotte. She was attacked while returning home from work. Now her family is left watching the legal system grind to a halt around the man accused of taking her life.
Brown's history in Mecklenburg County is not short. He has 14 prior cases there, including a 2015 conviction for robbery with a dangerous weapon. Earlier in 2025, before the August killing, Brown had been released on bond on a misdemeanor charge.
That bond release drew sharp criticism from state Republicans. The pattern is familiar to anyone who follows violent crime in America: a long rap sheet, a system that cycles offenders back onto the streets, and a victim who pays the price. Cases like the recent push in Florida to hold judges accountable after a freed offender killed a child reflect the same frustration, a justice system that fails to protect the public from people it already knows are dangerous.
Brown has said he was diagnosed with schizophrenia. That diagnosis now sits at the center of the legal standstill.
Legal experts note that competency determinations are a constitutional requirement. A defendant must be able to understand the proceedings and assist in his own defense. The finding does not mean Brown has been acquitted or declared not guilty by reason of insanity. It means the trial cannot move forward until his competency is restored, if it can be.
Brown faces both state and federal charges in the August 2025 killing. His federal custody complicates the state proceedings further. Roberts argued that the state cannot conduct the hearings it needs while Brown remains in federal hands, hence the request for a half-year delay.
Prosecutors did not object to the continuance. That detail alone tells you how tangled this case has become. Two jurisdictions, a defendant found incompetent, and no clear timeline for justice.
Zarutska's case reached the national stage in February, when her mother attended President Donald Trump's State of the Union address. Trump highlighted Brown's earlier bond release during the speech and criticized Democrats for not standing as he recognized Zarutska's mother.
Zarutska's family has described the killing as "tragic and preventable." That word, preventable, carries weight. Brown had a decade-old robbery conviction involving a dangerous weapon. He had 14 prior cases in Mecklenburg County. He was out on bond on a misdemeanor charge when the attack happened. At every stage, the system had information about who Brown was and what he had done.
The question families like Zarutska's keep asking is the same one the public keeps asking: why was this man free? Whether the discussion centers on convicted killers found walking among the public or repeat offenders cycled through lenient courts, the pattern points to a system that treats accountability as optional.
The incompetency finding means the state case is effectively frozen. If the six-month continuance is granted, the Rule 24 hearing will not take place until late 2026 at the earliest. And that assumes Brown's competency can be restored, an outcome that is far from guaranteed with a schizophrenia diagnosis.
The federal charges add another layer of complexity. Brown remains in federal custody, and the two cases will have to be coordinated in some fashion. Neither jurisdiction appears to be moving quickly.
For Zarutska's family, the delay compounds the loss. A young woman who survived a war and crossed an ocean to start over was killed on public transit in an American city. The man accused of doing it had a violent criminal history the courts already knew about. And now the legal system says it cannot even put him on trial.
Debates over whether the justice system adequately punishes violent offenders are not new. From high-profile murder cases that took decades to resolve to everyday failures in local courts, the gap between what the public expects and what the system delivers keeps growing.
Several basic facts remain unclear. What specific state and federal charges does Brown face? What was the misdemeanor charge that led to his bond release earlier in 2025? Where exactly is he being held in federal custody? None of these details have been publicly disclosed in the court filings reported so far.
The broader question is whether North Carolina's courts and bail practices did enough before August 2025 to keep the public safe from a man with 14 prior cases and a robbery conviction. That question does not require a psychiatric evaluation to answer. It requires honest scrutiny of a system that, by any reasonable measure, failed Iryna Zarutska.
Sentencing outcomes in violent crime cases vary wildly across the country. Some jurisdictions hand down sentences that strike many as inadequate for the brutality involved. Others take a harder line. What Charlotte's system did with Brown before August 2025 looks, at minimum, like a missed opportunity to prevent a killing.
Iryna Zarutska escaped a war zone. She did not escape a justice system that let a violent repeat offender walk free. That is the fact no competency ruling can change.
Two months after 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie was taken from her Tucson, Arizona home in the middle of the night, her daughter walked back onto the set of NBC's "Today", and a former FBI agent says that return is tightening the vise on whoever is responsible.
Former FBI agent Jason Pack told Page Six that a reward exceeding one million dollars, the full weight of FBI resources, and the relentless visibility of Savannah Guthrie's national platform are converging on the people behind the kidnapping. No arrests have been made. Nancy Guthrie remains missing.
That combination, money, federal manpower, and a famous face reminding millions of viewers every weekday morning, is the kind of sustained pressure that cold-case criminals rarely face. And Pack believes it will eventually crack someone's silence.
Nancy Guthrie was taken from her Tucson home in the early hours of Feb. 1 while she was asleep. Over a week later, authorities released video and photos showing a masked individual ripping a doorbell camera off the house and breaking in. The footage gave the public its first look at the brazenness of the crime.
Authorities have since detained and questioned several people in connection with the kidnapping. None of those encounters produced an arrest. The investigation, now well into its third month, has drawn FBI involvement and generated a reward that Pack described as more than one million dollars.
Investigators have also probed a mystery incident at Nancy Guthrie's home weeks before the kidnapping, a detail that has raised questions about whether the crime was premeditated and surveilled in advance.
The case has drawn intense public interest, in part because of who Nancy Guthrie's daughter is. Savannah Guthrie, 54, co-anchors one of the most-watched morning programs in the country. Her absence from "Today" during the crisis only amplified attention.
On Monday, Savannah Guthrie stepped back onto the "Today" set. Co-host Craig Melvin brought her outside to greet a crowd of fans at 8:30 a.m., calling her the show's "North Star."
Melvin told the audience:
"We are back at 8:30 on this beautiful Monday morning, and it's a special Monday morning for us and for this crowd as well, because we are welcoming back our North Star. Come on out here! Come right out!"
Savannah Guthrie walked out hand-in-hand with co-anchor Jenna Bush Hager after an emotional embrace. She addressed fans directly, thanking them for their support during the worst stretch of her life.
"These signs are so beautiful. You guys have been so beautiful. I received so many letters, so much kindness, to me and my whole family. We feel it, we feel your prayers, thank you!"
Page Six reported in April that it was the first outlet to report Savannah's planned return to the morning show. Before stepping back on set, she sat down for an emotional interview with Hoda Kotb.
Meanwhile, the FBI has returned to Nancy Guthrie's neighborhood, focusing on a vacant property and construction crews, a sign that investigators are still actively working leads near the crime scene.
Pack's analysis is straightforward: most criminals who commit kidnappings bet on the public losing interest. They count on families retreating from view. This case denies them that comfort.
Pack told Page Six:
"Most criminals in cases like this count on the media moving on. They count on the family fading from public view. They count on people forgetting. This case is different. Savannah has a national platform and she shows up on it every single day. Every time a viewer sees her face, they think about her mother."
That daily reminder, Pack argued, compounds the psychological burden on anyone with knowledge of the crime. He described the weight of concealment as exhausting, and growing heavier by the day.
"Every day that passes the pressure builds. Keeping a secret like this is exhausting.... and that gets harder with every morning that Savannah Guthrie sits behind that anchor desk."
The financial incentive adds another dimension. A reward north of one million dollars, combined with FBI resources, creates what Pack called pressure "closing from every direction at once." He urged Nancy Guthrie's neighbors to check their cameras and contact authorities with any information.
Forensic specialists have also weighed in on the investigation. Experts have examined DNA evidence and blood trail clues discovered in the weeks following Nancy's disappearance, adding another layer to the case that investigators are building.
Pack was blunt about what he expects will eventually break the case open:
"One phone call from someone who decides the reward money matters more than their silence is all it takes to bring law enforcement directly to their front door."
The absence of an arrest two months into a kidnapping investigation is not unusual in complex cases, particularly when the FBI is involved and building a federal case. But it tests the patience of a public that watched an elderly woman taken from her bed in the dead of night.
What distinguishes this case from so many others that fade from the news cycle is the identity of the victim's family. Savannah Guthrie did not retreat into private grief. She came back to work. She sat behind the desk. And every morning she does, she puts the crime back in front of millions of Americans.
The legal side of the investigation has also escalated. Federal prosecutors entered Nancy Guthrie's Tucson property as the FBI carried out what was described as a routine legal process, a move that suggests the federal government is treating this case with the seriousness it demands.
Authorities have detained and questioned several people but have not named suspects publicly. The Arizona sheriff has refused to rule out an accomplice, leaving open the possibility that more than one person was involved in the abduction.
The surveillance footage, a masked figure tearing off a doorbell camera, then forcing entry, tells a story of planning and intent. This was not a random act. Someone chose that house, that night, that woman. And two months later, the people who know why have not come forward.
Pack believes that will change. The reward is large enough to tempt. The FBI's reach is wide enough to frighten. And the anchor desk at "Today" is visible enough to remind.
Criminals count on the world forgetting. In this case, the world tunes in every morning at 7 a.m., and remembers.
President Donald Trump fired back at Tucker Carlson on Tuesday, telling the New York Post that the conservative commentator "has absolutely no idea what's going on" after Carlson publicly accused the administration of steering the country toward nuclear war with Iran. The sharp exchange marks the most visible rift yet between Trump and a former media ally over the direction of U.S. policy in a conflict now entering its sixth week.
Trump also called Carlson "low IQ," a pointed dismissal that landed after Carlson's viral X post and accompanying podcast remarks characterized the president's warning to strike Iranian infrastructure as "the first step toward nuclear war." Carlson went further, accusing Trump of threatening "war crimes" by targeting assets such as power plants and bridges, and urged administration officials to refuse to carry out any such orders.
The White House, for its part, called interpretations that the administration was considering nuclear options "absurd" and accused critics of deliberately mischaracterizing official statements, Newsmax reported.
Carlson's broadside did not arrive in a vacuum. The commentator, once among Trump's most prominent media allies, has been escalating his criticism of the administration's posture in the Middle East for weeks. In a post on X, he framed a recent Trump social media statement about Iranian infrastructure as an implicit threat of catastrophic escalation, a reading the White House flatly rejected.
The administration insists it is focused on protecting U.S. interests and restoring stability in the Middle East. Trump has taken a hard-line stance, demanding Iran reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face devastating consequences. He has emphasized that multiple military options remain on the table, ranging from intensified airstrikes to targeted operations against key Iranian assets. Experts cited in the reporting note that Kharg Island could become a strategic target if tensions continue to escalate.
None of that amounts to a nuclear threat. The White House made that distinction explicit.
Yet Carlson's framing, nuclear war, war crimes, insubordination, traveled fast online, forcing the administration into a defensive posture on a claim it calls fabricated. That dynamic is familiar to anyone who has watched political opponents level accusations against Trump without offering evidence, only to watch the accusation itself become the story.
The Tuesday clash did not emerge from nowhere. Carlson has been publicly breaking with Trump over the Iran conflict for some time. In an earlier round of criticism, he accused Trump of being "complicit" in the broader Middle East conflict because of U.S. funding and weapons support for Israel's strikes on Iran.
"Washington knew these attacks would happen. They aided Israel in carrying them out," Carlson wrote, as Newsmax previously reported. He argued that direct U.S. involvement in war with Iran would betray voters who supported Trump's "America First" platform, and urged the country to "drop Israel" and let it fight its own wars.
Carlson also turned on prominent conservative media figures, asking "Who are the warmongers?" on X before naming those he accused of pushing for military escalation. The targets included well-known pro-intervention voices in right-of-center media and the donor class.
That kind of rhetoric, accusing fellow conservatives of warmongering while urging military officials to defy presidential orders, goes well beyond policy disagreement. It is a call for institutional resistance to a sitting president from within his own political coalition, a pattern that has surfaced in other cases where former allies have broken with the White House on Iran.
Carlson is not entirely alone on the right. Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., has also voiced unease about Trump's response, though the nature of her specific objections is less clear. The broader tension reflects a genuine divide among more isolationist "America First" advocates who want the United States disengaged from Middle Eastern conflicts and those who view strong deterrence as the only credible path to avoiding a wider war.
Trump's position falls squarely in the deterrence camp. He has argued that strong deterrence is necessary to counter Iran's aggression and ensure the free flow of global energy through the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint whose closure would send oil prices soaring and punish American consumers at the pump.
The question is whether Carlson's brand of opposition, built on inflammatory claims the White House calls false, helps or hinders that debate. A good-faith argument against military escalation is one thing. Claiming the president is about to start a nuclear war, with no evidence to support it, is something else entirely.
Intra-party disagreements are nothing new. Prominent Republicans have publicly broken with Trump on foreign-policy questions before, from NATO commitments to the scope of executive authority. Those fights, however heated, at least tend to operate within the bounds of verifiable claims.
As the deadline for Iran to comply with U.S. demands approaches, the administration faces a genuine strategic challenge. Iran has not reopened the Strait of Hormuz. Military options remain on the table. The conflict is six weeks old and showing no sign of resolution.
What the administration does not need is a parallel fight over fabricated claims about nuclear weapons, claims its own White House has called absurd. The fog of online discourse is thick enough without a high-profile commentator adding to it by mischaracterizing official statements and then urging government officials to commit insubordination.
There is also a practical cost. Every hour the White House spends batting down false nuclear-war narratives is an hour not spent on the actual diplomacy and deterrence the situation demands. That dynamic benefits Iran, not the United States. It is worth asking whether those who demand transparency from the administration are genuinely interested in accountability, or simply in generating the loudest possible noise.
Trump's willingness to call out Carlson by name signals that the White House views the commentator's claims not as honest dissent but as reckless misinformation. Whether Carlson adjusts course or doubles down will say a great deal about whether his opposition is rooted in principle or performance.
Disagreement is healthy. Fabrication is not. And when a commentator with a massive platform invents a nuclear crisis to score points against a president managing a real one, the people who pay the price are the Americans trying to understand what their government is actually doing.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani rolled out his "Preliminary Citywide Racial Equity Plan" on Monday, a sweeping document that sets goals across seven policy domains, proposes over 800 strategies, and tasks every major city agency with examining its work "through a racial equity lens." The DOJ took notice almost immediately.
Harmeet Dhillon, the Department of Justice's Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, responded on X with two words that should concern City Hall: "Will review!" She also offered her initial assessment of the plan: "Sounds fishy/illegal."
That a sitting DOJ official flagged a major city's flagship equity initiative as potentially unlawful within hours of its release tells you something about how far outside the legal mainstream Mamdani's vision sits.
The city billed the racial equity plan as the "first time any New York City administration has required major city agencies to examine their work through a racial equity lens and identify and eliminate disparities," according to Fox News. It spans seven domains:
Across those categories, the plan lays out more than 200 agency-level goals and roughly 600 performance indicators. Mamdani had promised to release the preliminary report within his first 100 days in office. He delivered on schedule.
NYC Chief Equity Officer Afua Atta-Mensah framed the initiative in maximalist terms:
"The NYC Preliminary Citywide Racial Equity Plan reflects the city's commitment to systemic transformation—turning our values into actions. From housing and healthcare to education and infrastructure, every agency plays a pivotal role in reshaping how government serves New Yorkers."
"Systemic transformation" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. When a government official tells you she intends to reshape how every agency serves its residents based on racial categories, believe her.
This isn't just rhetoric. It comes with real money attached. Back in February, Mamdani's budget plan revealed that the Office of Racial Equity would receive $5.6 million annually and the Commission on Racial Equity would be allocated $4.6 million, a combined $10.2 million. That represents roughly a $3 million increase over last year's approximately $7.2 million allocation, about a 42% jump.
New York City is a place where potholes go unfilled, subway delays are a lifestyle, and small businesses drown in regulation. The city's answer: pour an additional $3 million into bureaucracies whose stated purpose is sorting residents by race and allocating government attention accordingly.
Mamdani tied his equity plan directly to his "True Cost of Living Measure," arguing the two are inseparable:
"These reports make one thing clear: we cannot tackle systemic racial inequity without confronting the affordability crisis head-on, and we cannot solve the cost-of-living crisis without dismantling systemic racial inequity."
Read that again carefully. You cannot fix inequity without fixing affordability, and you cannot fix affordability without fixing inequity. It's a closed loop, a perpetual motion machine of government intervention where every problem justifies more of the same solution. No exit conditions. No metrics for success that would ever allow the machinery to wind down.
This is how progressive governance operates: define the problem in terms that can never be fully resolved, then use the permanence of the problem to justify permanent expansion of the agencies tasked with solving it. The $10.2 million this year will become $15 million next year, then $20 million, because "systemic transformation" has no finish line.
Atta-Mensah said as much herself: "Inequity has been embedded in the foundation of our city and nation since their inception; dismantling it requires a collective effort." If inequity is foundational and has existed since inception, then the bureaucracy built to dismantle it never runs out of work.
The plan drew sharp criticism online. The Libs of TikTok account called it "straight-up racism against White people." Conservative commentator Paul A. Szypula put a finer point on it:
"The reality is Mamdani is implementing blatantly racist policies that reward and punish people based on their skin color."
The rhetoric is blunt, but the underlying concern is legitimate. When a city government explicitly designs policy to produce different outcomes for different racial groups, it raises serious constitutional questions. The Equal Protection Clause does not contain an exception for progressive intentions. The Supreme Court's 2023 decision striking down race-conscious college admissions made clear that the legal winds have shifted decisively against racial classification schemes, no matter how they're branded.
Dhillon's response suggests the DOJ sees the same problem. Her office exists to enforce civil rights law, and a municipal plan that requires agencies to allocate resources and "eliminate disparities" through a racial lens is, at minimum, inviting legal scrutiny.
Mamdani's focus on race-based governance is not new. He faced criticism dating back to his mayoral campaign for centering "equity" as a governing philosophy. The plan released Monday is the institutional expression of that campaign promise: a bureaucratic apparatus designed to embed racial categorization into every function of city government.
This is what "equity" looks like when it moves from slogan to policy. Not equal treatment under law, but engineered outcomes sorted by demographic group. Not colorblind governance, but color-obsessed governance with a $10.2 million annual budget and 800 strategies for making sure race stays at the center of every decision City Hall makes.
The DOJ review could be consequential. Federal civil rights enforcement under this administration has shown no appetite for the kind of race-conscious policymaking that progressive cities treat as self-evidently virtuous. If Dhillon's office determines that Mamdani's plan conditions city services or resource allocation on race, New York could find itself on the wrong end of a federal civil rights investigation.
Mamdani bet his first 100 days on a racial equity framework that assumes disparities can only be addressed by treating residents differently based on skin color. The Department of Justice just signaled that bets may not be legal.
Eight hundred strategies, seven domains, 600 performance indicators, and $10.2 million a year. All were built on the premise that the way to stop discriminating is to discriminate more carefully.
Two Republican election officials told ABC News they expect President Donald Trump's executive order restricting mail-in voting to be struck down in court, even as a coalition of Democratic state attorneys general filed suit in federal court in Boston to challenge it.
Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt and former Maricopa County Recorder Stephen Richer both said they believe the litigation to block the order is likely to succeed. Their comments arrived alongside a growing number of legal challenges from Democrat attorneys general, House Democrats, and left-leaning advocacy groups, all racing to block the order before it reshapes how states conduct elections.
The White House has defended the order as intended to strengthen election integrity and ensure only eligible citizens vote. That goal is not controversial among Republicans. But the messengers lining up against it, and the legal terrain they're choosing, tell a more complicated story.
Trump's executive order directs his administration to compile a list of confirmed U.S. citizens eligible to vote in each state and to use federal data to help state election officials verify eligibility. It requires the U.S. Postal Service to deliver ballots only to voters on each state's approved mail-in ballot list. States must also preserve election-related records for five years.
None of those provisions sound radical. Verifying citizenship, maintaining voter rolls, preserving records: these are the basic hygiene of election administration that conservatives have demanded for years. The question isn't whether those goals are worthy. It's whether an executive order is the right vehicle to achieve them.
Schmidt, appearing on ABC News' "This Week," framed his concern around voter confidence rather than partisan loyalty. He said:
"We want voters to know that the election is going to be free, fair, safe, and secure, and that everyone knows what the rules are prior to going into this."
His worry is confusion, not the underlying policy. When rules change mid-cycle or get tangled in litigation, voters lose clarity about how to cast their ballots. That uncertainty, Schmidt argued, cuts against the very trust the order is meant to build.
"So confusion is never a positive thing unless you are seeking to sow distrust in the outcome of an election."
According to Newsweek, Richer, who ran Maricopa County elections from 2021 to 2025, struck a similar note. He acknowledged agreeing with "some of the elements in the executive order and some of the aspirations" but called the order unnecessary, noting that Arizona already has many of the features Trump wants applied nationally. His core objection was procedural:
"While I agree with some of the elements in the executive order and some of the aspirations, the form does matter."
This is a familiar fault line on the right. Conservative election officials who have spent years building integrity measures at the state level often bristle when Washington attempts to dictate process from the top down. It's the same federalism instinct that drove Republican resistance to federal election mandates under the Obama administration. The principle doesn't change because the president signing the order has an R next to his name.
A coalition of Democrat state attorneys general announced Friday they were filing a lawsuit challenging the executive order in federal court in Boston. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who filed one of the separate lawsuits, offered predictably breathless commentary on "This Week":
"That executive order is unlawful and unconstitutional. We've already filed litigation, and we expect that it will be declared so in short order by the courts."
Jeffries also declared his side would "work as hard as we can to make sure that this is a free and fair election." Which is interesting language from a party that has spent the last several years arguing that any attempt to verify voter eligibility is voter suppression. Democrats have fought voter ID laws, resisted citizenship verification on registration forms, and sued states for cleaning outdated names from voter rolls. Now they invoke "free and fair elections" as their rallying cry against an order that asks the Postal Service to deliver ballots only to approved voters.
The contradiction is loud. When Republicans propose verifying who votes, Democrats call it disenfranchisement. When Democrats sue to block those verification measures, they call it protecting democracy. The principle bends to serve the outcome they want.
Additional cases are being pursued by what the source material describes as "arms of the Democratic Party and voting rights advocates," a coalition that functions as the legal infantry of the progressive movement whenever election rules shift rightward.
The honest conservative conversation here isn't about whether election integrity matters. It does. It isn't about whether mail-in voting has vulnerabilities. It does. The conversation is about strategy.
Executive orders are inherently fragile instruments. They can be reversed by the next president, enjoined by a single federal judge, and litigated into irrelevance before they ever take effect. The legal challenges already piling up in Boston and elsewhere suggest this order may spend more time in courtrooms than in practice.
State-level election reform, by contrast, has proven durable. Georgia's Election Integrity Act survived a corporate boycott, media hysteria, and DOJ scrutiny. Florida tightened its mail-in voting rules and saw smooth elections with broad public confidence. Arizona, as Richer himself noted, already has many of the features the executive order seeks to impose nationally. These reforms succeeded because they were built through legislatures, survived legal challenges on their own constitutional footing, and earned democratic legitimacy in the process.
The goals embedded in Trump's executive order, citizen verification, ballot delivery controls, record preservation, are goals that belong in state law. Codified through legislation, they become far harder for the next Democrat administration to unwind. Issued by executive pen, they become lawsuit magnets that hand Democrats a sympathetic narrative about overreach.
The legal trajectory is predictable. A federal judge, likely in a blue-leaning jurisdiction, will issue an injunction. The administration will appeal. The case will grind through the courts while Democrats fundraise off every hearing. Meanwhile, the actual policy goals remain unimplemented.
None of this means the underlying impulse is wrong. Americans deserve to know that only eligible citizens are voting. The Postal Service should not be delivering ballots to addresses with no verified voter. Election records should be preserved long enough to audit.
But achieving those goals requires building them on ground that courts cannot easily wash away. Two Republican officials who share the president's priorities are saying, plainly, that this particular foundation won't hold.
That's not opposition. It's advice worth hearing.
