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The truth is that the USPS's problems were largely created by Congress. (Photo: Ron Doke/Flickr/cc)
Let's say you're in charge of a mission-critical government agency facing an expected nationwide surge in demand in three months or less while struggling with an existing national emergency.
Would you:
--Institute a reduction of overtime and a hiring freeze while signaling your tolerance for slower delivery of crucial services to customers?
--Radically reorganize your operation, assigning new duties to inexperienced managers and removing the most experienced executives without explanation?
--Describe your actions as an "operational pivot" and pick fights with the very people you're required to report to?
No? Then you're plainly not as qualified to run the U.S. Postal Service as Louis DeJoy, the millionaire political fundraiser bristling with conflicts of interest who has been placed in charge of the mail by President Trump.
DeJoy has taken over just as the postal service must gear up to handle a surge in vote-by-mail ballots filed by voters wary of reporting in person to their polling places because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Instead of focusing on what should be Job One, he's performed as a one-man wrecking crew. Residents coast-to-coast have noticed that mail deliveries have gotten slower.
In a well-reported survey, Ellie Rushing of the Philadelphia Inquirer documented "some residents going upwards of three weeks without packages and letters, leaving them without medication, paychecks, and bills."
Where's the mail? It's "piling up in offices, unscanned and unsorted" while overwhelmed postal workers make do without vacation replacements.
Here's betting that many of my readers have experienced a change in mail service, for the worse. At my house, deliveries have been arriving later and later in the day--on one occasion the mail arrived shortly before nightfall, an eight-hour delay that hadn't happened before in 20 years at my address.
These developments have properly raised concerns about whether the U.S. Postal Service will be able--or willing--to manage the burden of mail-in voting this fall.
There's even an unconfirmed report, via the Capitol Forum, that the Postal Service is contemplating charging states the full 55-cent first class rate to mail ballots to voters instead of the customary preferential 20-cent rate -- tripling the cost of ballot mailings for states.
DeJoy is the first postmaster general in 20 years to not be promoted from within the Postal Service. But he has a lot of experience as head of companies that have competed with the USPS and as an investor in the system's rivals, including UPS.
He has denied that his management changes have anything to do with hampering mail delivery before the election, but some of his moves are indistinguishable from steps one would take to hamstring the service. Most recently, he reshuffled more than 30 top officials, an action that inevitably will produce turmoil from top to bottom.
And if the Postal Service can't adequately handle the election, it's democracy that will pay the price.
We've written at length about Trump's infantile hostility toward the USPS. By some reckonings, it has something to do with the service's contract to deliver packages for Amazon, which was founded by Jeff Bezos, whose ownership of the Washington Post, a consistent Trump critic, sticks in Trump's craw. Trump maintains that the contract is a sweetheart deal for Amazon, but there isn't a speck of evidence for that.
Trump has pushed to privatize the Postal Service even thought privatization would almost certainly mean crummy service and immense price increases, making it the surest route to turning the public's documented public admiration for the Postal Service into public scorn.
Asked to defend his attacks on the U.S. Postal Service, Trump has just lied about them. Over and over again.
These attacks are part and parcel of the standard Republican approach to public services. Typically, that boils down to "making government work like a business"--in other words, to justify government operations and their very existence on a profit-and-loss basis. If they can't make a go of things on those terms, get rid of them.
The problem with this argument is that, pretty much by definition, government can't and shouldn't be run "like a business." Its responsibility is to provide services to people who can't afford to pay for them, to invest infrastructure when private businesses won't (even though business will reap the ultimate benefits), and to perform other duties that can't be costed out.
That's why the cry to make government work like a business is always selective. Republicans don't demand that the military work like a business, because if it did, we wouldn't have armed forces. We would never have built Hoover Dam or the interstate highway system.
The GOP cry is typically directed at services for the poor. The ridiculous campaign to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipient has been consistently explained as an effort to make Medicaid more fiscally "efficient." Cuts in food stamps are routinely justified by the inability of the United States to afford to keep food on the table for low-income Americans.
Republican-endorsed cutbacks in public services were memorably described by Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) in 2017 as "cartoonishly malicious."
He was referring then to a GOP proposal to strip minimum essential benefits such as hospitalization and prescription coverage from health plans qualified under the Affordable Care Act--"I can picture someone twirling their mustache as they drafted it in their secret Capitol lair," he said at the time.
But the epithet applies much more broadly in the Trump era, during which Republicans have never lifted a finger to protect public goods and programs such as healthcare, food stamps, housing assistance, and more recently aid for American families whose household budgets have been blown to bits by the coronavirus outbreak.
In fact, the term is too mild. The assault on public services has moved well beyond cartoonishness and reached the level of pure, unadulterated malice.
The Postal Service has become a major target of these people. Let's revisit the bill of particulars.
In an internal memo to postal workers DeJoy issued shortly after his appointment in May, he wrote of the "journey we must take together, for the health and stability of the Postal Service" and attributed some of its problems to "soaring costs."
DeJoy didn't mention at all the single most important driver of the Postal Service's annual deficit: the onerous requirement, enacted in 2006, that the service pre-fund its retiree healthcare costs, a mandate not imposed on any other government agency or private corporation.
According to the Institute for Policy Studies, a Washington think tank, the mandate costs the USPS more than $4 billion a year. Without this burden, the institute says, "the Post Office would have reported operating profits in each of the last six years." Instead, "This extraordinary mandate created a financial 'crisis' that has been used to justify harmful service cuts and even calls for postal privatization."
It's true that first class mail, which was once the post office's bread and butter, has been on a long-term decline. First class mail volume peaked at 103.7 billion pieces annually in 2001. As Americans switched to automatic bill payment, email and e-vites, volume fell 47% by fiscal 2019 to 54.9 billion.
Parcel deliveries have taken up some of the slack, rising in price, revenue and share of total Postal Service income over the last few years. But delivering packages is also more expensive than delivering letters.
Parcels require additional heavier trucks, more personnel and more fuel. Although the Postal Service is collecting more revenue from packages than it used to, that still is not fully compensating for the falloff in letter revenue.
That might be a major concern if the Postal Service were a private company, but it's not. It's a government service, and among the virtues of a government service is the service it provides to all citizens no matter where they live, even if it can't be done profitably.
Early in the Trump administration, his Office of Management and Budget described privatizing the USPS in terms of sedulous glee: "A privatized Postal Service would have a substantially lower cost structure, be able to adapt to changing customer needs and make business decisions free from political interference."
In other words, it would cut pay and staffing, abandoning customers and communities far from the beaten path. This is how free-market businesses such as cable operators work--they serve dense, high-population areas but keep remote places that are costly and difficult to serve out of their business plans.
We already know how private mail services work. UPS and FedEx provide the necessary examples. To mail a first class letter--a birthday card to your grandmother, perhaps--costs 55 cents no matter where you live and where it's going. The minimum charge from FedEx is $11 and at UPS $30.18, according to their websites.
Mailing an item in a U.S. Postal Service medium flat-rate box costs $15.05, anywhere in the U.S. At UPS it's $30.81, and at FedEx $34.50. The Postal Service will carry its flat-rate large box (24 inches by 12 inches by 3 inches) anywhere in the U.S., from Key West, Fla., to Anchorage, for $21.10. The same box, carried from California to southern Michigan, will cost $36.59 on UPS and $34.50 in FedEx. But send it to Anchorage, and the price jumps to $49.39 on UPS and $52.81 on FedEx, according to their websites.
This is the aspect of universal mail service that Trump and his acolytes overlook. The Constitution placed the responsibility for the mail in the hands of the post office, purportedly at Benjamin Franklin's urging, because the Founding Fathers saw it as a public service binding this disparate country into one.
They didn't demand that the mail pay its own way, and certainly not that it be privatized. The spectacle of wrecking the post office on the eve of a national election would have shocked them. And it should shock you. Our very democracy hangs in the balance.
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. |
Let's say you're in charge of a mission-critical government agency facing an expected nationwide surge in demand in three months or less while struggling with an existing national emergency.
Would you:
--Institute a reduction of overtime and a hiring freeze while signaling your tolerance for slower delivery of crucial services to customers?
--Radically reorganize your operation, assigning new duties to inexperienced managers and removing the most experienced executives without explanation?
--Describe your actions as an "operational pivot" and pick fights with the very people you're required to report to?
No? Then you're plainly not as qualified to run the U.S. Postal Service as Louis DeJoy, the millionaire political fundraiser bristling with conflicts of interest who has been placed in charge of the mail by President Trump.
DeJoy has taken over just as the postal service must gear up to handle a surge in vote-by-mail ballots filed by voters wary of reporting in person to their polling places because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Instead of focusing on what should be Job One, he's performed as a one-man wrecking crew. Residents coast-to-coast have noticed that mail deliveries have gotten slower.
In a well-reported survey, Ellie Rushing of the Philadelphia Inquirer documented "some residents going upwards of three weeks without packages and letters, leaving them without medication, paychecks, and bills."
Where's the mail? It's "piling up in offices, unscanned and unsorted" while overwhelmed postal workers make do without vacation replacements.
Here's betting that many of my readers have experienced a change in mail service, for the worse. At my house, deliveries have been arriving later and later in the day--on one occasion the mail arrived shortly before nightfall, an eight-hour delay that hadn't happened before in 20 years at my address.
These developments have properly raised concerns about whether the U.S. Postal Service will be able--or willing--to manage the burden of mail-in voting this fall.
There's even an unconfirmed report, via the Capitol Forum, that the Postal Service is contemplating charging states the full 55-cent first class rate to mail ballots to voters instead of the customary preferential 20-cent rate -- tripling the cost of ballot mailings for states.
DeJoy is the first postmaster general in 20 years to not be promoted from within the Postal Service. But he has a lot of experience as head of companies that have competed with the USPS and as an investor in the system's rivals, including UPS.
He has denied that his management changes have anything to do with hampering mail delivery before the election, but some of his moves are indistinguishable from steps one would take to hamstring the service. Most recently, he reshuffled more than 30 top officials, an action that inevitably will produce turmoil from top to bottom.
And if the Postal Service can't adequately handle the election, it's democracy that will pay the price.
We've written at length about Trump's infantile hostility toward the USPS. By some reckonings, it has something to do with the service's contract to deliver packages for Amazon, which was founded by Jeff Bezos, whose ownership of the Washington Post, a consistent Trump critic, sticks in Trump's craw. Trump maintains that the contract is a sweetheart deal for Amazon, but there isn't a speck of evidence for that.
Trump has pushed to privatize the Postal Service even thought privatization would almost certainly mean crummy service and immense price increases, making it the surest route to turning the public's documented public admiration for the Postal Service into public scorn.
Asked to defend his attacks on the U.S. Postal Service, Trump has just lied about them. Over and over again.
These attacks are part and parcel of the standard Republican approach to public services. Typically, that boils down to "making government work like a business"--in other words, to justify government operations and their very existence on a profit-and-loss basis. If they can't make a go of things on those terms, get rid of them.
The problem with this argument is that, pretty much by definition, government can't and shouldn't be run "like a business." Its responsibility is to provide services to people who can't afford to pay for them, to invest infrastructure when private businesses won't (even though business will reap the ultimate benefits), and to perform other duties that can't be costed out.
That's why the cry to make government work like a business is always selective. Republicans don't demand that the military work like a business, because if it did, we wouldn't have armed forces. We would never have built Hoover Dam or the interstate highway system.
The GOP cry is typically directed at services for the poor. The ridiculous campaign to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipient has been consistently explained as an effort to make Medicaid more fiscally "efficient." Cuts in food stamps are routinely justified by the inability of the United States to afford to keep food on the table for low-income Americans.
Republican-endorsed cutbacks in public services were memorably described by Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) in 2017 as "cartoonishly malicious."
He was referring then to a GOP proposal to strip minimum essential benefits such as hospitalization and prescription coverage from health plans qualified under the Affordable Care Act--"I can picture someone twirling their mustache as they drafted it in their secret Capitol lair," he said at the time.
But the epithet applies much more broadly in the Trump era, during which Republicans have never lifted a finger to protect public goods and programs such as healthcare, food stamps, housing assistance, and more recently aid for American families whose household budgets have been blown to bits by the coronavirus outbreak.
In fact, the term is too mild. The assault on public services has moved well beyond cartoonishness and reached the level of pure, unadulterated malice.
The Postal Service has become a major target of these people. Let's revisit the bill of particulars.
In an internal memo to postal workers DeJoy issued shortly after his appointment in May, he wrote of the "journey we must take together, for the health and stability of the Postal Service" and attributed some of its problems to "soaring costs."
DeJoy didn't mention at all the single most important driver of the Postal Service's annual deficit: the onerous requirement, enacted in 2006, that the service pre-fund its retiree healthcare costs, a mandate not imposed on any other government agency or private corporation.
According to the Institute for Policy Studies, a Washington think tank, the mandate costs the USPS more than $4 billion a year. Without this burden, the institute says, "the Post Office would have reported operating profits in each of the last six years." Instead, "This extraordinary mandate created a financial 'crisis' that has been used to justify harmful service cuts and even calls for postal privatization."
It's true that first class mail, which was once the post office's bread and butter, has been on a long-term decline. First class mail volume peaked at 103.7 billion pieces annually in 2001. As Americans switched to automatic bill payment, email and e-vites, volume fell 47% by fiscal 2019 to 54.9 billion.
Parcel deliveries have taken up some of the slack, rising in price, revenue and share of total Postal Service income over the last few years. But delivering packages is also more expensive than delivering letters.
Parcels require additional heavier trucks, more personnel and more fuel. Although the Postal Service is collecting more revenue from packages than it used to, that still is not fully compensating for the falloff in letter revenue.
That might be a major concern if the Postal Service were a private company, but it's not. It's a government service, and among the virtues of a government service is the service it provides to all citizens no matter where they live, even if it can't be done profitably.
Early in the Trump administration, his Office of Management and Budget described privatizing the USPS in terms of sedulous glee: "A privatized Postal Service would have a substantially lower cost structure, be able to adapt to changing customer needs and make business decisions free from political interference."
In other words, it would cut pay and staffing, abandoning customers and communities far from the beaten path. This is how free-market businesses such as cable operators work--they serve dense, high-population areas but keep remote places that are costly and difficult to serve out of their business plans.
We already know how private mail services work. UPS and FedEx provide the necessary examples. To mail a first class letter--a birthday card to your grandmother, perhaps--costs 55 cents no matter where you live and where it's going. The minimum charge from FedEx is $11 and at UPS $30.18, according to their websites.
Mailing an item in a U.S. Postal Service medium flat-rate box costs $15.05, anywhere in the U.S. At UPS it's $30.81, and at FedEx $34.50. The Postal Service will carry its flat-rate large box (24 inches by 12 inches by 3 inches) anywhere in the U.S., from Key West, Fla., to Anchorage, for $21.10. The same box, carried from California to southern Michigan, will cost $36.59 on UPS and $34.50 in FedEx. But send it to Anchorage, and the price jumps to $49.39 on UPS and $52.81 on FedEx, according to their websites.
This is the aspect of universal mail service that Trump and his acolytes overlook. The Constitution placed the responsibility for the mail in the hands of the post office, purportedly at Benjamin Franklin's urging, because the Founding Fathers saw it as a public service binding this disparate country into one.
They didn't demand that the mail pay its own way, and certainly not that it be privatized. The spectacle of wrecking the post office on the eve of a national election would have shocked them. And it should shock you. Our very democracy hangs in the balance.
Let's say you're in charge of a mission-critical government agency facing an expected nationwide surge in demand in three months or less while struggling with an existing national emergency.
Would you:
--Institute a reduction of overtime and a hiring freeze while signaling your tolerance for slower delivery of crucial services to customers?
--Radically reorganize your operation, assigning new duties to inexperienced managers and removing the most experienced executives without explanation?
--Describe your actions as an "operational pivot" and pick fights with the very people you're required to report to?
No? Then you're plainly not as qualified to run the U.S. Postal Service as Louis DeJoy, the millionaire political fundraiser bristling with conflicts of interest who has been placed in charge of the mail by President Trump.
DeJoy has taken over just as the postal service must gear up to handle a surge in vote-by-mail ballots filed by voters wary of reporting in person to their polling places because of the coronavirus outbreak.
Instead of focusing on what should be Job One, he's performed as a one-man wrecking crew. Residents coast-to-coast have noticed that mail deliveries have gotten slower.
In a well-reported survey, Ellie Rushing of the Philadelphia Inquirer documented "some residents going upwards of three weeks without packages and letters, leaving them without medication, paychecks, and bills."
Where's the mail? It's "piling up in offices, unscanned and unsorted" while overwhelmed postal workers make do without vacation replacements.
Here's betting that many of my readers have experienced a change in mail service, for the worse. At my house, deliveries have been arriving later and later in the day--on one occasion the mail arrived shortly before nightfall, an eight-hour delay that hadn't happened before in 20 years at my address.
These developments have properly raised concerns about whether the U.S. Postal Service will be able--or willing--to manage the burden of mail-in voting this fall.
There's even an unconfirmed report, via the Capitol Forum, that the Postal Service is contemplating charging states the full 55-cent first class rate to mail ballots to voters instead of the customary preferential 20-cent rate -- tripling the cost of ballot mailings for states.
DeJoy is the first postmaster general in 20 years to not be promoted from within the Postal Service. But he has a lot of experience as head of companies that have competed with the USPS and as an investor in the system's rivals, including UPS.
He has denied that his management changes have anything to do with hampering mail delivery before the election, but some of his moves are indistinguishable from steps one would take to hamstring the service. Most recently, he reshuffled more than 30 top officials, an action that inevitably will produce turmoil from top to bottom.
And if the Postal Service can't adequately handle the election, it's democracy that will pay the price.
We've written at length about Trump's infantile hostility toward the USPS. By some reckonings, it has something to do with the service's contract to deliver packages for Amazon, which was founded by Jeff Bezos, whose ownership of the Washington Post, a consistent Trump critic, sticks in Trump's craw. Trump maintains that the contract is a sweetheart deal for Amazon, but there isn't a speck of evidence for that.
Trump has pushed to privatize the Postal Service even thought privatization would almost certainly mean crummy service and immense price increases, making it the surest route to turning the public's documented public admiration for the Postal Service into public scorn.
Asked to defend his attacks on the U.S. Postal Service, Trump has just lied about them. Over and over again.
These attacks are part and parcel of the standard Republican approach to public services. Typically, that boils down to "making government work like a business"--in other words, to justify government operations and their very existence on a profit-and-loss basis. If they can't make a go of things on those terms, get rid of them.
The problem with this argument is that, pretty much by definition, government can't and shouldn't be run "like a business." Its responsibility is to provide services to people who can't afford to pay for them, to invest infrastructure when private businesses won't (even though business will reap the ultimate benefits), and to perform other duties that can't be costed out.
That's why the cry to make government work like a business is always selective. Republicans don't demand that the military work like a business, because if it did, we wouldn't have armed forces. We would never have built Hoover Dam or the interstate highway system.
The GOP cry is typically directed at services for the poor. The ridiculous campaign to impose work requirements on Medicaid recipient has been consistently explained as an effort to make Medicaid more fiscally "efficient." Cuts in food stamps are routinely justified by the inability of the United States to afford to keep food on the table for low-income Americans.
Republican-endorsed cutbacks in public services were memorably described by Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) in 2017 as "cartoonishly malicious."
He was referring then to a GOP proposal to strip minimum essential benefits such as hospitalization and prescription coverage from health plans qualified under the Affordable Care Act--"I can picture someone twirling their mustache as they drafted it in their secret Capitol lair," he said at the time.
But the epithet applies much more broadly in the Trump era, during which Republicans have never lifted a finger to protect public goods and programs such as healthcare, food stamps, housing assistance, and more recently aid for American families whose household budgets have been blown to bits by the coronavirus outbreak.
In fact, the term is too mild. The assault on public services has moved well beyond cartoonishness and reached the level of pure, unadulterated malice.
The Postal Service has become a major target of these people. Let's revisit the bill of particulars.
In an internal memo to postal workers DeJoy issued shortly after his appointment in May, he wrote of the "journey we must take together, for the health and stability of the Postal Service" and attributed some of its problems to "soaring costs."
DeJoy didn't mention at all the single most important driver of the Postal Service's annual deficit: the onerous requirement, enacted in 2006, that the service pre-fund its retiree healthcare costs, a mandate not imposed on any other government agency or private corporation.
According to the Institute for Policy Studies, a Washington think tank, the mandate costs the USPS more than $4 billion a year. Without this burden, the institute says, "the Post Office would have reported operating profits in each of the last six years." Instead, "This extraordinary mandate created a financial 'crisis' that has been used to justify harmful service cuts and even calls for postal privatization."
It's true that first class mail, which was once the post office's bread and butter, has been on a long-term decline. First class mail volume peaked at 103.7 billion pieces annually in 2001. As Americans switched to automatic bill payment, email and e-vites, volume fell 47% by fiscal 2019 to 54.9 billion.
Parcel deliveries have taken up some of the slack, rising in price, revenue and share of total Postal Service income over the last few years. But delivering packages is also more expensive than delivering letters.
Parcels require additional heavier trucks, more personnel and more fuel. Although the Postal Service is collecting more revenue from packages than it used to, that still is not fully compensating for the falloff in letter revenue.
That might be a major concern if the Postal Service were a private company, but it's not. It's a government service, and among the virtues of a government service is the service it provides to all citizens no matter where they live, even if it can't be done profitably.
Early in the Trump administration, his Office of Management and Budget described privatizing the USPS in terms of sedulous glee: "A privatized Postal Service would have a substantially lower cost structure, be able to adapt to changing customer needs and make business decisions free from political interference."
In other words, it would cut pay and staffing, abandoning customers and communities far from the beaten path. This is how free-market businesses such as cable operators work--they serve dense, high-population areas but keep remote places that are costly and difficult to serve out of their business plans.
We already know how private mail services work. UPS and FedEx provide the necessary examples. To mail a first class letter--a birthday card to your grandmother, perhaps--costs 55 cents no matter where you live and where it's going. The minimum charge from FedEx is $11 and at UPS $30.18, according to their websites.
Mailing an item in a U.S. Postal Service medium flat-rate box costs $15.05, anywhere in the U.S. At UPS it's $30.81, and at FedEx $34.50. The Postal Service will carry its flat-rate large box (24 inches by 12 inches by 3 inches) anywhere in the U.S., from Key West, Fla., to Anchorage, for $21.10. The same box, carried from California to southern Michigan, will cost $36.59 on UPS and $34.50 in FedEx. But send it to Anchorage, and the price jumps to $49.39 on UPS and $52.81 on FedEx, according to their websites.
This is the aspect of universal mail service that Trump and his acolytes overlook. The Constitution placed the responsibility for the mail in the hands of the post office, purportedly at Benjamin Franklin's urging, because the Founding Fathers saw it as a public service binding this disparate country into one.
They didn't demand that the mail pay its own way, and certainly not that it be privatized. The spectacle of wrecking the post office on the eve of a national election would have shocked them. And it should shock you. Our very democracy hangs in the balance.
One advocate said the move was "yet another example of the Trump administration using immigration policy to target the most vulnerable among us."
The Trump administration announced on Friday that it was revoking the Temporary Protected Status—or TPS—for thousands of immigrants from Cameroon and Afghanistan who are currently living and working in the United States.
The move, the latest attempt by the administration to roll back protections for migrants in the U.S. who cannot safely return to their home countries due to conflict or natural disasters, comes despite the fact that advocates say conditions in both countries remain dangerous.
"TPS exists for a reason: to protect people whose return to their country would place them in grave danger. Afghanistan today is still reeling from Taliban rule, economic collapse, and humanitarian disaster. Nothing about that reality has changed," president and CEO of Global Refuge Krish O'Mara Vignarajah said in a statement. "Terminating protections for Afghans is a morally indefensible betrayal of allies who stood shoulder-to-shoulder with us to advance American interests throughout our country's longest war."
"We cannot afford to lose this protection; our lives depend on it."
President Donald Trump made his promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants a central plank of his 2024 campaign. However, since taking office, he has consistently moved not only to crack down on undocumented immigration but to revoke the status of migrants who are in the country legally. This has included attempting to strip TPS from other nationalities, revoking visas and even green cards from immigrants from certain countries or who voice opinions the administration dislikes, and ordering nearly 1 million people who entered the country using a Biden-administration app to leave "immediately."
Friday's decision would impact more than 14,600 Afghans and 7,900 Cameroonians, who would now have to leave the country by May and June respectively, according to Al Jazeera.
TPS means that immigrants from certain countries undergoing conflict or hardship—who may not qualify for asylum—will not be deported and will be able to work legally in the U.S. until the situation in their home country improves.
Cameroonians have been grated TPS due to civil conflict between the government and separatists that sparked in 2017. The violence has collapsed the economy and forced almost 1 million people to flee their homes within the country. More than 1.8 million people there urgently need humanitarian assistance.
"TPS has been a lifeline that has allowed me to live in safety and dignity," Amos, a Cameroonian TPS holder and member of CASA—a group that organizes working class Black, Latino, African-descendant, Indigenous, and immigrant communities—said in a statement. "Returning to Cameroon would put me and thousands of others in grave danger, as violence and government attacks continue to devastate our communities back home. With the protection of TPS, I have been able to build a stable life in the U.S., contribute meaningfully to my community, and pursue a future full of promise. We cannot afford to lose this protection; our lives depend on it."
CASA executive director Gustavo Torres said: "By ending TPS for Cameroon, President Trump has again prioritized his instincts for ethnic cleansing by forcibly returning people to violence, human rights violations, and a humanitarian crisis in Cameroon that continues to place its citizens at severe risk. Cameroon clearly meets the statutory basis for the redesignation of TPS. This termination of TPS is a xenophobic attack that targets our families and neighbors and endangers the economy of the U.S."
In Afghanistan, the Taliban government continues to violate human rights, arresting Afghans who worked with the U.S.-backed government and severely limiting the freedom of women and girls.
"For Afghan women and girls, ending these humanitarian protections means ending access to opportunity, freedom, and safety," Vignarajah said. "Forcing them back to Taliban rule, where they face systemic oppression and gender-based violence, would be an utterly unconscionable stain on our nation's reputation."
In addition, the Biden administration determined in 2023 that conflict in the country contributed to internal displacement and economic instability, making it difficult for people there to access food, water, and healthcare.
Council on American-Islamic relations-California CEO Hussam Ayloush said:
Ending TPS for Afghans and Cameroonians is a cruel and dangerous escalation of the Trump administration's anti-immigrant agenda and a shameful betrayal of our moral and humanitarian obligations. These individuals have fled war, persecution, and instability—and, in the case of many Afghans, risked their lives to support U.S. operations. This decision will separate families and force people into the shadows. For some of them, TPS may be their only option for protection from deportation. It's yet another example of the Trump administration using immigration policy to target the most vulnerable among us. Decisions such as these deepen fear in our communities and erode trust in our government's commitment to protecting human rights.
There is a good chance, however, that the administration's decision will not stand up in court. A federal judge has already temporarily blocked its attempt to end protections for Venezuelans, saying the order was "motivated by unconstitutional animus."
"We will closely examine the terminations to determine whether the government complied with the TPS statute in determining Afghanistan and Cameroon are now safe to accept returns of their nationals as required by the TPS statute," Ahilan Arulanantham, an attorney who helped bring the case challenging the ending of TPS status for Venezuelans, told The New York Times.
"It is no small thing to overturn the results of an election in a democracy by throwing out ballots that were legally cast consistent with all election laws in effect on the day of the election," one dissenting justice said.
In what North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein called a "dark day" for the state, the North Carolina Supreme Court on Friday delivered a partial victory to Republican Judge Jefferson Griffin, who is challenging some 65,000 votes in his bid to overturn the narrow win of his Democratic opponent and incumbent state Supreme Court Justice Allison Riggs.
The Supreme Court, ruling 4-2, partially overturned an appeals court decision earlier this month that gave all the challenged voters 15 days to affirm their identities. Instead, the state's highest court ruled that around 60,000 ballots with registration inconsistencies would not be challenged, but approximately 5,000 overseas or military voters would have to verify their identities within 30 days. Riggs said she would challenge the ruling in federal court, and asked the court to temporarily block the order.
"I'm the proud daughter of a 30-year military veteran who was deployed overseas, and it is unacceptable that the court is choosing to selectively disenfranchise North Carolinians serving our country, here and overseas," Riggs said in a statement. "While I'm gratified to see the Court of Appeals reversed on the erroneous decision to potentially disenfranchise the more than 60,000 North Carolinians whose registration my opponent has recklessly challenged, I will not waiver in my fight to protect the fundamental freedoms for which our military service members and their families have sacrificed so much."
"This shocking decision abandons the judiciary's most basic role, to protect the rights of the people, and sanctions an outright attempt to steal an election."
Riggs won the November contest to remain on the state Supreme Court by 734 votes, but Griffin has challenged several thousand votes, predominantly on two grounds: Around 60,000 of the challenged votes are from in-state voters whose driver's license or social security numbers were missing from a state database of registered voters, while another approximately 2,000 to 7,000 are overseas or military voters who did not show ID when voting absentee. A significant number of the votes he challenged belonged to people living in Democratic-leaning counties.
The state Supreme Court on Friday ruled that the 60,000 in-state voters should not be challenged because their rights should not be denied due to “mistakes made by negligent election officials in registering citizens who are otherwise eligible to vote," as The New York Times reported.
However, the court allowed the challenge to the overseas votes to stand, even though overseas voters have never before been required to show ID since a state-voter ID law went into effect.
"Republicans are surgically targeting military voters from six counties and forcing them to re-prove themselves or be disenfranchised," Anderson Clayton, the chairwoman of the North Carolina Democratic Party, said in a statement reported by the Times.
Finally, the court also allowed the votes of nearly 300 voters who had never lived in North Carolina—often the children of North Carolina residents who turned 18 while living abroad—to be tossed.
If the state Supreme Court's ruling stands and the military and overseas votes are rejected, Griffin has said he expects it will be enough to tip the election in his favor, WRAL News reported.
The two dissenting justices vehemently condemned the majority decision.
"It is no small thing to overturn the results of an election in a democracy by throwing out ballots that were legally cast consistent with all election laws in effect on the day of the election," Democratic Justice Anita Earls wrote. "Some would call it stealing the election, others might call it a bloodless coup, but by whatever name, no amount of smoke and mirrors makes it legitimate."
Justice Richard Dietz, a Republican, broke with his party and agreed that the court should not alter election laws after the fact. He also criticized his colleagues for not hearing arguments before making their decision.
"By every measure, this is the most impactful election-related court decision our state has seen in decades," Dietz wrote. "It cries out for our full review and for a decisive rejection of this sort of post hoc judicial tampering in election results."
State and national Democratic Party leaders also spoke out against the court's decision.
"Today is a dark day for our courts and our state," North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein wrote on social media. "The North Carolina Supreme Court ruled that certain active duty military voters serving our nation must jump through hoops that other voters don't. All voters have a constitutional right to be treated equally under the law—it is foundational to our democracy. It's unconscionable, and this decision cannot stand."
Former Attorney General Eric Holder called the ruling "both a disgrace and legacy defining for those who put their names behind it."
"This shocking decision abandons the judiciary's most basic role, to protect the rights of the people, and sanctions an outright attempt to steal an election," he said in a statement. "The North Carolina Supreme Court's Republican majority has, for naked partisan reasons, cherrypicked whose votes count and whose do not. It is the height of political arrogance to tell military members who serve and sacrifice for our country, and other voters, that their votes and those of their family members are questionable."
Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chair Ken Martin said: "Jefferson Griffin doesn't get to pick and choose whose votes count in an election—no politician does. The men and women serving in our military will not allow their voices to be silenced by a desperate loser like Griffin."
"The nation is watching North Carolina," Martin continued. "Meanwhile, the DNC and Democrats across this country stand ready to marshal resources and manpower to ensure every vote cast in this election is counted. The people's voices will be heard, and Justice Allison Riggs will take her rightful place on the North Carolina Supreme Court."
"Trump is breaking the law and flouting a court order by handing the fossil fuel industry and polluters this blank check to kill millions of migratory birds," one advocate said.
The Trump administration moved on Friday to weaken protections for migratory birds threatened by industrial activities, including oil and gas operations.
Acting Solicitor of the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) Gregory Zerzan restored an opinion from the first Trump administration that the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) "does not apply to the accidental or incidental taking or killing of migratory birds," despite the fact that this opinion was already ruled illegal in federal court.
"Trump is breaking the law and flouting a court order by handing the fossil fuel industry and polluters this blank check to kill millions of migratory birds," said Tara Zuardo, a senior campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. "The United States has lost billions of birds over the past 50 years, and that decline will accelerate horrifically because of this callous, anti-wildlife directive. No one voted to slaughter hummingbirds, cranes, and raptors, but this is the reality of Trump's illegal actions today."
"We're not going to succeed in addressing the crisis facing birds and other wildlife if we let this and other historic rollbacks stand."
The new directive comes as birds in the U.S. are under threat, with their numbers falling by around 30% since 1970. A number of factors are responsible for this decline, among them the climate emergency, habitat loss, falling insect populations, window strikes, and outdoor cats. However, conservationists told The New York Times that industrial activities would be a greater threat if not for the protection the law provides.
For example, Zuardo told the Times that if U.S. President Donald Trump's interpretation of the law had been in effect following BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010—which likely killed over 1 million birds—the company would not have been charged the around $100 million in fines that went to support bird conservation after the disaster.
Friday's directive is part of an ongoing effort over the course of both Trump administrations to weaken the MBTA so that it only targets the purposeful killing of birds, dropping enforcement against accidents such as as oil spills, drownings in uncovered oil pits, trappings in open mining pipes, and collisions with power lines or communication towers.
In 2017, lead Interior Department lawyer Daniel Jorjani issued an initial legal opinion claiming the MBTA only covered purposeful killings. This interpretation was struck down by a federal court in 2020, which argued that the act's "clear language" put it in "direct conflict" with the Trump opinion.
This didn't stop the Trump administration from issuing a final rule attempting to enshrine its interpretation of the MBTA at the end of Trump's first term, which was widely decried by bird advocates.
"We're not going to succeed in addressing the crisis facing birds and other wildlife if we let this and other historic rollbacks stand," Erik Schneider, policy manager for the National Audubon Society, said at the time.
However, months into the presidency of Joe Biden, DOI principal deputy solicitor Robert T. Anderson withdrew the initial 2017 Trump administration opinion after an appeals court, following the request of the U.S. government, dismissed the Trump administration's earlier appeal of the 2020 court decision.
"The lower court decision is consistent with the Department of the Interior's long-standing interpretation of the MBTA," Anderson wrote.
Later, the Biden administration also reversed the formal Trump-era rule weakening the MBTA.
Now, in his second term, Trump is coming for the birds again. The Biden-era withdrawal was one of 20 Biden-era opinions that the Trump DOI suspended in March. It was then officially revoked and withdrawn on Friday.
In justifying its decision, Trump's DOI cited the president's January 20 executive order "Unleashing American Energy," which calls on federal agencies to "suspend, revise, or rescind all agency actions identified as unduly burdensome," making it clear the weakening of protections is largely intended to benefit the fossil fuel and mining industries.