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Talk about turning the bleak page: On his first day as A.G., the honorable Merrick Garland was movingly welcomed by a jubilant applauding crowd; he offered them the alluring vision of an independent DOJ that will "show the American people by word and deed the DOJ pursues equal justice and adheres to the rule of law." Observers responded with a palpable sense of reprieve. "Justice is coming," said one. And, "Can we start arresting people today or do we have to wait? Asking for a nation."
Screenshot of Garland arriving at work
Talk about turning the bleak page: On his first day as Attorney General, the honorable, long maltreated Merrick Garland was movingly welcomed by an applauding crowd of jubilant DOJ employees and survivors of the last regime visibly relieved to witness the return of competence and normalcy. Garland, 68, began his career at the DOJ in the 1970s under Jimmy Carter; he described his first interview there at 26 as "awe-inspiring." He already stood out among peers for his integrity: As valedictorian at his high school graduation, he departed from his prepared remarks to give an eloquent oration on the 1st Amendment after an earlier speaker enraged the audience by condemning the Vietnam War. As a prosecutor, he oversaw the trial of Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh; since 1997, he has served as a judge on D.C.'s US Court of Appeals. In March 2016, Obama nominated him to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, urging hostile Republicans to grant him a hearing and vote, but Mitch 'I-Have-Always-Been-An-Unprincipled-Scumbag' McConnell famously, sneeringly refused; may he live to regret it. During Garland's confirmation hearing, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker asked why he wanted to serve as attorney general, and Garland became emotional. "I come from a family where my grandparents fled anti-Semitism and persecution," he said. "The country took us in and protected us, and I feel an obligation to the country to pay back."
Before his swearing-in by VP Kamala Harris, Garland gave a brief speech to about 30 distanced people, of the over 100,000 who work there, in the DOJ's Great Hall. He vowed the department would return to "the norms that are part of the DNA of the Justice Department," which call for adherence to the rule of law free of political malfeasance by, say, mad kings who might wander in. Those norms, he said, "require that like cases be treated alike" - not one rule for Democrats and one for Republicans, or for friends and foes, powerful and powerless, rich and poor, depending on ethnicity. He cited the need for "a government of laws, and not men (and women" (to) show the American people by word and deed the DOJ pursues equal justice and adheres to the rule of law." Online, the glad sense of reprieve from hacks and crooks and lackeys was palpable. "Merrick Garland is in the building," proclaimed one. "Justice is coming." People celebrated "Hold Insurrectionists Accountable" month, "The Revenge of the Garland," that "a grotesque injustice has finally been somewhat remediated," that it's time "to turn over some stones and see what crawls out." One posted a clip of a grinning, invincible John Travolta sashaying down the street to "Stayin' Alive." In the name of MLK's hopeful claim, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," another longingly wondered, "So can we start arresting people today or do we have to wait? Asking for a nation."
\u201cWATCH: Merrick Garland is welcomed back to the Justice Department with applause as he begins his first day as attorney general https://t.co/O0WHnkmALQ\u201d— Bloomberg Quicktake (@Bloomberg Quicktake) 1615480954
Trump and Musk are on an unconstitutional rampage, aiming for virtually every corner of the federal government. These two right-wing billionaires are targeting nurses, scientists, teachers, daycare providers, judges, veterans, air traffic controllers, and nuclear safety inspectors. No one is safe. The food stamps program, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are next. It’s an unprecedented disaster and a five-alarm fire, but there will be a reckoning. The people did not vote for this. The American people do not want this dystopian hellscape that hides behind claims of “efficiency.” Still, in reality, it is all a giveaway to corporate interests and the libertarian dreams of far-right oligarchs like Musk. Common Dreams is playing a vital role by reporting day and night on this orgy of corruption and greed, as well as what everyday people can do to organize and fight back. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover issues the corporate media never will, but we can only continue with our readers’ support. |
Screenshot of Garland arriving at work
Talk about turning the bleak page: On his first day as Attorney General, the honorable, long maltreated Merrick Garland was movingly welcomed by an applauding crowd of jubilant DOJ employees and survivors of the last regime visibly relieved to witness the return of competence and normalcy. Garland, 68, began his career at the DOJ in the 1970s under Jimmy Carter; he described his first interview there at 26 as "awe-inspiring." He already stood out among peers for his integrity: As valedictorian at his high school graduation, he departed from his prepared remarks to give an eloquent oration on the 1st Amendment after an earlier speaker enraged the audience by condemning the Vietnam War. As a prosecutor, he oversaw the trial of Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh; since 1997, he has served as a judge on D.C.'s US Court of Appeals. In March 2016, Obama nominated him to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, urging hostile Republicans to grant him a hearing and vote, but Mitch 'I-Have-Always-Been-An-Unprincipled-Scumbag' McConnell famously, sneeringly refused; may he live to regret it. During Garland's confirmation hearing, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker asked why he wanted to serve as attorney general, and Garland became emotional. "I come from a family where my grandparents fled anti-Semitism and persecution," he said. "The country took us in and protected us, and I feel an obligation to the country to pay back."
Before his swearing-in by VP Kamala Harris, Garland gave a brief speech to about 30 distanced people, of the over 100,000 who work there, in the DOJ's Great Hall. He vowed the department would return to "the norms that are part of the DNA of the Justice Department," which call for adherence to the rule of law free of political malfeasance by, say, mad kings who might wander in. Those norms, he said, "require that like cases be treated alike" - not one rule for Democrats and one for Republicans, or for friends and foes, powerful and powerless, rich and poor, depending on ethnicity. He cited the need for "a government of laws, and not men (and women" (to) show the American people by word and deed the DOJ pursues equal justice and adheres to the rule of law." Online, the glad sense of reprieve from hacks and crooks and lackeys was palpable. "Merrick Garland is in the building," proclaimed one. "Justice is coming." People celebrated "Hold Insurrectionists Accountable" month, "The Revenge of the Garland," that "a grotesque injustice has finally been somewhat remediated," that it's time "to turn over some stones and see what crawls out." One posted a clip of a grinning, invincible John Travolta sashaying down the street to "Stayin' Alive." In the name of MLK's hopeful claim, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," another longingly wondered, "So can we start arresting people today or do we have to wait? Asking for a nation."
\u201cWATCH: Merrick Garland is welcomed back to the Justice Department with applause as he begins his first day as attorney general https://t.co/O0WHnkmALQ\u201d— Bloomberg Quicktake (@Bloomberg Quicktake) 1615480954
Screenshot of Garland arriving at work
Talk about turning the bleak page: On his first day as Attorney General, the honorable, long maltreated Merrick Garland was movingly welcomed by an applauding crowd of jubilant DOJ employees and survivors of the last regime visibly relieved to witness the return of competence and normalcy. Garland, 68, began his career at the DOJ in the 1970s under Jimmy Carter; he described his first interview there at 26 as "awe-inspiring." He already stood out among peers for his integrity: As valedictorian at his high school graduation, he departed from his prepared remarks to give an eloquent oration on the 1st Amendment after an earlier speaker enraged the audience by condemning the Vietnam War. As a prosecutor, he oversaw the trial of Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh; since 1997, he has served as a judge on D.C.'s US Court of Appeals. In March 2016, Obama nominated him to replace Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, urging hostile Republicans to grant him a hearing and vote, but Mitch 'I-Have-Always-Been-An-Unprincipled-Scumbag' McConnell famously, sneeringly refused; may he live to regret it. During Garland's confirmation hearing, New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker asked why he wanted to serve as attorney general, and Garland became emotional. "I come from a family where my grandparents fled anti-Semitism and persecution," he said. "The country took us in and protected us, and I feel an obligation to the country to pay back."
Before his swearing-in by VP Kamala Harris, Garland gave a brief speech to about 30 distanced people, of the over 100,000 who work there, in the DOJ's Great Hall. He vowed the department would return to "the norms that are part of the DNA of the Justice Department," which call for adherence to the rule of law free of political malfeasance by, say, mad kings who might wander in. Those norms, he said, "require that like cases be treated alike" - not one rule for Democrats and one for Republicans, or for friends and foes, powerful and powerless, rich and poor, depending on ethnicity. He cited the need for "a government of laws, and not men (and women" (to) show the American people by word and deed the DOJ pursues equal justice and adheres to the rule of law." Online, the glad sense of reprieve from hacks and crooks and lackeys was palpable. "Merrick Garland is in the building," proclaimed one. "Justice is coming." People celebrated "Hold Insurrectionists Accountable" month, "The Revenge of the Garland," that "a grotesque injustice has finally been somewhat remediated," that it's time "to turn over some stones and see what crawls out." One posted a clip of a grinning, invincible John Travolta sashaying down the street to "Stayin' Alive." In the name of MLK's hopeful claim, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice," another longingly wondered, "So can we start arresting people today or do we have to wait? Asking for a nation."
\u201cWATCH: Merrick Garland is welcomed back to the Justice Department with applause as he begins his first day as attorney general https://t.co/O0WHnkmALQ\u201d— Bloomberg Quicktake (@Bloomberg Quicktake) 1615480954
"As Jewish students, we grew up learning about the rise of fascism, learning about how important it is to stand up when you see injustice in the world," said one protester.
Jewish Columbia University students had chained themselves to a fence on campus for 45 minutes on Wednesday, in protest of the school's cooperation with immigration agents to arrest a leader of last year's pro-Palestinian encampment, when New York City Police officers arrived to break up the nonviolent action.
One student identified as Shea, who was wearing a kippah with a watermelon design and a keffiyeh—symbols of Palestinian solidarity—told independent journalist Meghnad Bose that university trustees are "directly implicated" in Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) targeting of Mahmoud Khalil, a former student who helped lead negotiations demanding Columbia's divestment from Israel last year.
Shea said trustees handed over the names of Khalil and other pro-Palestinian students at Columbia to the government.
"We are here in protest of that to demand that the university tell us which trustees, which members of the university administration, are responsible for this so we can demand immediate consequences for them and hold them accountable for what they've done to our peer," said the undergraduate student.
Shea added that Jewish students were leading the protest because "the attacks on our international students, on students of color, have been so fierce, so dangerous, so disproportionate that we are the only students who can be here right now taking this risk."
Listen in to the student protesters themselves @DropSiteNews pic.twitter.com/R3LIWWQspI
— Meghnad Bose (@MeghnadBose93) April 2, 2025
Plainclothes ICE agents abducted Khalil last month as he was returning home to his apartment in a Columbia-owned building with his pregnant wife. The agents refused to identify themselves and ultimately Khalil was sent to an ICE detention facility in Louisiana. Khalil is an Algerian citizen of Palestinian descent and had a green card, which has reportedly been revoked by the Trump administration, while his wife—who is pregnant with their first child—is a U.S. citizen.
A federal court in New Jersey ruled Tuesday that the challenge to ICE's unlawful detention of Khalil should continue in the state. His wife responded that "this is an important step towards securing Mahmoud's freedom, but there is still a lot more to be done. As the countdown to our son's birth begins and I inch closer and closer to my due date, I will continue to strongly advocate for Mahmoud’s freedom and for his safe return home so he can be by my side to welcome our first child."
Khalil was detained days after the Trump administration announced it was canceling $400 million in grants and contracts for Columbia in retaliation for what it claimed was a failure to address antisemitism on campus. The Trump administration has conflated expressions of support for Palestinian rights on college campuses with attacks on Jewish students, as did the Biden administration before it.
Columbia oversaw an aggressive response to the protests last year, allowing NYPD officers to drag students out of a building they occupied and unofficially renamed Hind's Hall after Hind Rajab, a six-year-old girl who was killed by Israeli forces in Gaza.
An analysis of last year's pro-Palestinian campus protests, many of which were led by Jewish students, found that 97% of them were nonviolent.
A Barnard College student identified as Tali said Wednesday that "as Jewish students, we grew up learning about the rise of fascism, learning about how important it is to stand up when you see injustice in the world."
Campus security quickly cordoned off the area where students had chained themselves to the fence. After the NYPD arrived, security officers used bolt cutters to remove the protesters from the fence.
Breaking: Columbia campus security bring giant bolt cutters to forcibly break the student protesters away from the Columbia gates they had chained themselves to.@DropSiteNews pic.twitter.com/pSROblLjjf
— Meghnad Bose (@MeghnadBose93) April 2, 2025
Bose reported that "in [a] sudden escalation, Columbia campus security aggressively [engaged] student protesters," and tried to take away a banner reading, "Free Mahmoud Khalil."
"Love and solidarity to these courageous Jewish students who have chained themselves to the gates of Columbia in protest of the university turning over their friend Mahmoud Khalil to a fascist administration," said Simone Zimmerman, co-founder of the Jewish-led group IfNotNow.
The students, said Zimmerman, "are taking risks today that they know most of their peers cannot."
The Trump administration is "plotting to sell off America's national public lands to their billionaire friends, and Kate MacGregor is the perfect henchwoman."
Watchdog groups are warning that U.S. President Donald Trump's pick for deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior, Kate MacGregor—who they call a friend of the fossil fuel industry—will be an enthusiastic accomplice in the Trump administration's efforts to open up public land to oil and gas leasing.
Trump, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, and Trump's billionaire adviser Elon Musk "are plotting to sell off America's national public lands to their billionaire friends, and Kate MacGregor is the perfect henchwoman," said Alan Zibel, a research director with the watchdog Public Citizen, in a statement on Wednesday.
MacGregor, an energy company executive who was deputy secretary of the Department of the Interior during the first Trump administration from early 2020 until January 2021 had her confirmation hearing Wednesday before the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
Oil Change International's U.S. campaign manager Collin Rees blasted MacGregor over her testimony, including support for legislation co-sponsored by Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) that would require the Interior Department to hold two offshore oil and gas lease sales per year for 10 years.
MacGregor's previous time in the Interior Department, showed she "prioritized fossil fuel interests over the good of the American people."
"Her support for a decade of at least two offshore oil and gas lease sales is completely incompatible with avoiding the worst impacts of the climate crisis, as well as the Department of Interior's mandate to protect public lands and waters," Rees said.
In 2017, as an aide to then-Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, MacGregor helped successfully fast track a permit for an oil firm to begin fracking on a patch of farmland in Oklahoma, according to 2019 reporting from the investigative outlet Reveal.
"While a senior staffer of the House Committee on Natural Resources, she developed strong ties to the energy industry and its lobbyists," according to Reveal. "In recent years, she has also built a public profile as an advocate of offshore oil drilling and a foe of any environmental rules that might limit energy production."
According to a record of her work calendar, which was obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request by the nonprofit publication Pacific Standard, MacGregor met over 100 times with extractive industry groups or representatives between January of 2017 and January of 2018, when she was at the Department of the Interior but not yet the deputy secretary.
Pointing to MacGregor's background, executive director of the watchdog Accountable.US Tony Carrk said that with MacGregor's nomination, Trump "continues to build a dream team of big oil and gas shills to ravage America's public lands, while taxpayers and our environment deal with all the fallout."
Zibel of Public Citizen also noted that "public lands belong to all Americans, not wealthy corporate executives."
Meanwhile, Public Citizen is also sounding the alarm on the expected appointment of Matt Giacona, a lobbyist for the National Ocean Industries Association—which represents oil, gas, and wind companies working offshore—to head the Department of Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM). The current person leading BOEM is retiring, according to Politico Pro.
In response to the potential appointment of Giacona to BOEM, which oversees offshore energy production in deep waters, director of Public Citizen's energy program Tyson Slocum on Wednesday said: "Trump Appointing a Big Oil lobbyist to oversee deep water oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico shows that the administration's goal is to empower and enrich powerful corporations at the expense of everyone and everything else."
"This continues the clear trend of Trump turning federal agencies and the public good into profit opportunities for powerful corporate interests," he said.
"Consumers all over the world are sick of Elon Musk's attempt to promote dangerous far-right leaders, policies, and movements," said one advocate.
On the heels of the news that Tesla CEO Elon Musk's investment of $20 million in the Wisconsin Supreme Court race—including offers of $1 million checks to individual voters—didn't manage to swing the election in the Republican Party's favor, the Trump administration adviser's electric car company learned of more trouble: Tesla's global sales declined by 13% in the first quarter of 2025, dropping to their lowest point in nearly three years.
The plunge in sales was evident across markets, even in countries where Musk hasn't sparked outrage by embedding himself into politics by bankrolling and supporting far-right candidates and groups.
In Norway, The New York Times noted, electric cars account for more than 90% of new car sales—but among Norwegians, whose prime minister recently rebuked Musk's involvement in the political systems of Germany and the U.K.—Tesla sales have nearly matched the global trend so far this year, declining by more than 12% in the first quarter.
Sales in other European countries were even more dire in the first three months of 2025—down 41% in France, 50% in the Netherlands, and 55% in Sweden, where consumers have Musk's anti-labor practices to contend with in addition to his political activities in Europe.
Sweden's largest insurer said Wednesday it had sold its $160 million stake in Tesla after investing in the company since 2013, saying Tesla's workers' rights position violates its investment guidelines.
"The American people have gotten a crash course in what happens when the richest man in the world gets the keys to our country."
Musk, whose net worth is $386.6 billion, has long refused to sign a collective bargaining agreement with fewer than 200 mechanics in Sweden to ensure they earn a fair wage. Unionized mechanics in the country have been on strike for over a year.
One Norway Tesla owner told the Times that he "would never drive a Tesla again."
"It's a question of ethics," said urban planner Geir Rognlien Elgvin.
After pouring nearly $300 million into the 2024 elections in the U.S. to help President Donald Trump and other Republicans get elected, Musk has spent the past two months boasting of his push to cut public spending and government jobs—attacking the popular anti-poverty Social Security program as a "Ponzi scheme"; gutting the Department of Education, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, and other federal agencies; and pushing tens of thousands of civil servants out of their jobs through the Trump-created advisory body the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
Adam Zuckerman, senior clean vehicles campaigner with government watchdog Public Citizen's climate program, said Wednesday that Tesla's most recent sales numbers illustrate how anger over Musk's activities—which has also been expressed with protests at Tesla dealerships—extends past U.S. borders.
"Tesla's plummeting sales show that consumers all over the world are sick of Elon Musk's attempt to promote dangerous far-right leaders, policies, and movements," said Zuckerman. "They are fed up with DOGE's effort to gut life-saving services and aid. Consumers want electric vehicles, not cruelty, fascism, racism, and neo-Nazism. Unless Musk changes course, Tesla sales will continue to decline."
A poll by Yahoo News and YouGov late last month found that two-thirds of Americans said they would not drive a Tesla, with a majority saying Musk himself was the reason for their distaste.
"Musk is driving our country into the ground," said Zuckerman when the poll was released. "If he continues, he could take Tesla and America's urgent transition to an electric future with it."
Tesla's plummeting sales contrast with global electric car sales overall, which are on the rise. Ford Moter, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz are among the automakers planning to soon introduce new electric vehicles.
"Previously consumers might have struggled to find other options than Tesla that really competed," Will Roberts of research firm Rho Motion told the Times. "That's now not the case."
Trump has attempted to shore up his benefactor and ally's company, holding an event on the White House lawn last month during which he praised Musk's electric cars and condemned protests at Tesla dealerships. He also suggested people who are turning away from Tesla are "Radical Left Lunatics" who are "trying to illegally and collusively boycott" the car company.
His administration has since doubled down on threatening people for vandalizing the cars or dealerships, with the president saying he would send them to El Salvador, where hundreds of people accused of being gang members have been sent to a prison in recent weeks.
But despite the show of loyalty, Trump was reportedly considering pulling back on Musk's front-and-center presence in the administration Wednesday.
Economic justice group Groundwork Collaborative said Musk's impending exit—which Trump denied was coming—is likely in response to Musk proving "to be a liability," but cautioned that rights advocates will still have to fight the Trump agenda even without Musk in the White House serving as a "special government employee."
"The American people have gotten a crash course in what happens when the richest man in the world gets the keys to our country," said Lindsay Owens, executive director of the group. "Musk's threat to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid has pushed consumer confidence to new lows. Businesses are pulling back on investments, and markets have plunged. Americans can now celebrate Musk's exit."
"But Musk's ouster is only the first step in achieving true liberation," said Owens. "He is a symptom of a broader disease, which is that billionaires are tightening their grip on our democracy. To cure the disease, we must put our power back in the hands of the people."