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Activists rally against the Republican healthcare agenda outside of the Metropolitan Republican Club on July 5, 2017 in New York City. (Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
At the start of Tuesday's unhinged presidential debate -- as the pandemic continued to rage outside the walls of Case Western University -- the American people were offered an anemic vision for promoting and expanding public health. In the shadow of more than 200,000 deaths from the novel coronavirus, viewers heard pushback on the use of masks, critiques of publicly funded healthcare, and lies about nonexistent plans to mend a broken and inhumane healthcare system.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell presses forward to stack the Supreme Court with another judge who threatens the Affordable Care Act, which would risk kicking 20 million more people off Medicaid.
Across the United States, poor and dispossessed people cannot wait for our politicians to act. This week, in states including Kansas, Maine, Alabama, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Vermont, and Pennsylvania, people are coming together in "Medicaid Marches" to demand their right to health and healthcare.
They know that Black people are dying at twice the rate of white people and that poverty is the highest risk factor for people of all races. They know that the United States now accounts for over 20 percent of worldwide deaths, despite having only 5 percent of the world's population and that this was entirely preventable.
These Medicaid Marches are being led by the uninsured and underinsured, unhoused people, low-wage, essential and undocumented workers, healthcare workers, clergy, and others. The marches are the first coordinated nationwide push of the Nonviolent Medicaid Army, a vehicle to build the power of poor and dispossessed people, led by those on or excluded from Medicaid, which remains the only public healthcare option for the 140 million poor and low-income people in the country. This emerging new force is modeled after what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. envisioned as a "multi-racial, intergenerational, nonviolent army of the poor."
Over the next few days, Medicaid marchers are moving their rallies from the operations of corporate healthcare profiteers (hospitals, pharmaceutical and insurance corporations) to state houses, state prisons, and police stations. People from all walks of life will march to dramatize the ways in which governments defend private profits over human lives. Amid so many concurrent crises, they are drawing the connection between all forms of state violence, from physical force to immoral policies that suffocate life.
In Pennsylvania, marchers in Lancaster will call for justice for Ricardo Munoz, a poor, Black and Latinx man gunned down by police in the midst of a mental health crisis. Just a week before his killing, the Lancaster City Council voted unanimously in favor of a proposal by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to rezone their former hospital building, closed in 2019, opening the door for the development of luxury housing.
Ricardo's unnecessary death stands as a stark reminder of what happens when healthcare infrastructure is defunded and mental health services are shredded. As is the case in Lancaster, the void left by inadequate and inaccessible healthcare is too often filled by the crisis of police violence in poor communities of color.
A January 2020 study found that while the United States spends more on healthcare as a share of the economy than other similar countries, it has the lowest life expectancy, highest chronic disease burden, highest suicide rates, and highest rate of avoidable deaths among those countries.
Mortality rates among Black infants and maternal mortality rates among Black women are disproportionately high, indigenous people have a life expectancy that is 5.5 years lower than the national average, and at least 250,000 people die every year from poverty and inequality.
In 2018, there were 87 million people who were uninsured or underinsured. This year, close to 12 million people have already lost their employer-sponsored healthcare. Millions fall into a coverage gap where private insurance is too expensive but their income is above the Medicaid cutoff. Approximately 22,000-27,000 die every year from being uninsured. And state legislatures around the country are making it clear that they will seek to fill the budget holes created by the pandemic-triggered global economic crisis by cutting life-saving public programs like Medicaid.
These numbers paint a painful picture, but the Nonviolent Medicaid Army knows that it is not dramatic statistics or studies that will win the day. It will take a unified force of poor and dispossessed people, united across racial, geographic, and all other lines of division, that is absolutely clear that denial of healthcare amounts to policy violence on a mass scale.
Fully funding Medicaid, and expanding it to all U.S. residents, is not beyond our means. Just one military contract could cover the cost of expanding Medicaid in 14 states. Although we are constantly sold the lie of scarcity, we have the money to fully fund universal single-payer healthcare, if only our government wanted to.
In Kansas, Claire Chadwick, an essential worker who contracted Covid-19 at her workplace, could not afford to be hospitalized and was never treated for her symptoms. She still suffers from shortness of breath and may have long-term health consequences that will continue beyond her ability to pay. Claire and others are organizing two Medicaid Marches with the Kansas Poor People's Campaign: A National Call For Moral Revival.
Anthony Prince, with the California Chapter of the National Union of the Homeless is joining the Nonviolent Medicaid Army because homeless people, whose ranks are growing every day, are in the crosshairs of the crises of healthcare, housing, and police violence. Every year, homeless people have to reapply for Medi-Cal. They can't list a street as their location of care and providers don't even have to accept this state-based insurance program.
In North Carolina, low-wage workers like Eshawney Gaston with Raise Up 15 and others are calling for healthcare for all, a voice to set health and safety standards on the job, and safety protections for incarcerated people. Leaders like Eshany clearly see that low-wage workers are disproportionately Black and Brown and that healthcare and workplace safety issues are not just a health or labor issue but a racial justice issue.
As millions more in this country are thrown into the ranks of the unemployed or underemployed, the demand for Medicaid will skyrocket. And as the pandemic continues to ravage lives and communities, denying health care is not an option. Despite the prattle on the debate stage, healthcare remains one of the top concerns on the minds of the American people headed into the November election.
The Nonviolent Medicaid Army seeks to organize this growing social force -- the poor and dispossessed -- in the fight for healthcare as a human right.
Within a system that seeks to profit off our pain, sickness, and death, this is a demand that can no longer be ignored.
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. |
At the start of Tuesday's unhinged presidential debate -- as the pandemic continued to rage outside the walls of Case Western University -- the American people were offered an anemic vision for promoting and expanding public health. In the shadow of more than 200,000 deaths from the novel coronavirus, viewers heard pushback on the use of masks, critiques of publicly funded healthcare, and lies about nonexistent plans to mend a broken and inhumane healthcare system.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell presses forward to stack the Supreme Court with another judge who threatens the Affordable Care Act, which would risk kicking 20 million more people off Medicaid.
Across the United States, poor and dispossessed people cannot wait for our politicians to act. This week, in states including Kansas, Maine, Alabama, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Vermont, and Pennsylvania, people are coming together in "Medicaid Marches" to demand their right to health and healthcare.
They know that Black people are dying at twice the rate of white people and that poverty is the highest risk factor for people of all races. They know that the United States now accounts for over 20 percent of worldwide deaths, despite having only 5 percent of the world's population and that this was entirely preventable.
These Medicaid Marches are being led by the uninsured and underinsured, unhoused people, low-wage, essential and undocumented workers, healthcare workers, clergy, and others. The marches are the first coordinated nationwide push of the Nonviolent Medicaid Army, a vehicle to build the power of poor and dispossessed people, led by those on or excluded from Medicaid, which remains the only public healthcare option for the 140 million poor and low-income people in the country. This emerging new force is modeled after what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. envisioned as a "multi-racial, intergenerational, nonviolent army of the poor."
Over the next few days, Medicaid marchers are moving their rallies from the operations of corporate healthcare profiteers (hospitals, pharmaceutical and insurance corporations) to state houses, state prisons, and police stations. People from all walks of life will march to dramatize the ways in which governments defend private profits over human lives. Amid so many concurrent crises, they are drawing the connection between all forms of state violence, from physical force to immoral policies that suffocate life.
In Pennsylvania, marchers in Lancaster will call for justice for Ricardo Munoz, a poor, Black and Latinx man gunned down by police in the midst of a mental health crisis. Just a week before his killing, the Lancaster City Council voted unanimously in favor of a proposal by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to rezone their former hospital building, closed in 2019, opening the door for the development of luxury housing.
Ricardo's unnecessary death stands as a stark reminder of what happens when healthcare infrastructure is defunded and mental health services are shredded. As is the case in Lancaster, the void left by inadequate and inaccessible healthcare is too often filled by the crisis of police violence in poor communities of color.
A January 2020 study found that while the United States spends more on healthcare as a share of the economy than other similar countries, it has the lowest life expectancy, highest chronic disease burden, highest suicide rates, and highest rate of avoidable deaths among those countries.
Mortality rates among Black infants and maternal mortality rates among Black women are disproportionately high, indigenous people have a life expectancy that is 5.5 years lower than the national average, and at least 250,000 people die every year from poverty and inequality.
In 2018, there were 87 million people who were uninsured or underinsured. This year, close to 12 million people have already lost their employer-sponsored healthcare. Millions fall into a coverage gap where private insurance is too expensive but their income is above the Medicaid cutoff. Approximately 22,000-27,000 die every year from being uninsured. And state legislatures around the country are making it clear that they will seek to fill the budget holes created by the pandemic-triggered global economic crisis by cutting life-saving public programs like Medicaid.
These numbers paint a painful picture, but the Nonviolent Medicaid Army knows that it is not dramatic statistics or studies that will win the day. It will take a unified force of poor and dispossessed people, united across racial, geographic, and all other lines of division, that is absolutely clear that denial of healthcare amounts to policy violence on a mass scale.
Fully funding Medicaid, and expanding it to all U.S. residents, is not beyond our means. Just one military contract could cover the cost of expanding Medicaid in 14 states. Although we are constantly sold the lie of scarcity, we have the money to fully fund universal single-payer healthcare, if only our government wanted to.
In Kansas, Claire Chadwick, an essential worker who contracted Covid-19 at her workplace, could not afford to be hospitalized and was never treated for her symptoms. She still suffers from shortness of breath and may have long-term health consequences that will continue beyond her ability to pay. Claire and others are organizing two Medicaid Marches with the Kansas Poor People's Campaign: A National Call For Moral Revival.
Anthony Prince, with the California Chapter of the National Union of the Homeless is joining the Nonviolent Medicaid Army because homeless people, whose ranks are growing every day, are in the crosshairs of the crises of healthcare, housing, and police violence. Every year, homeless people have to reapply for Medi-Cal. They can't list a street as their location of care and providers don't even have to accept this state-based insurance program.
In North Carolina, low-wage workers like Eshawney Gaston with Raise Up 15 and others are calling for healthcare for all, a voice to set health and safety standards on the job, and safety protections for incarcerated people. Leaders like Eshany clearly see that low-wage workers are disproportionately Black and Brown and that healthcare and workplace safety issues are not just a health or labor issue but a racial justice issue.
As millions more in this country are thrown into the ranks of the unemployed or underemployed, the demand for Medicaid will skyrocket. And as the pandemic continues to ravage lives and communities, denying health care is not an option. Despite the prattle on the debate stage, healthcare remains one of the top concerns on the minds of the American people headed into the November election.
The Nonviolent Medicaid Army seeks to organize this growing social force -- the poor and dispossessed -- in the fight for healthcare as a human right.
Within a system that seeks to profit off our pain, sickness, and death, this is a demand that can no longer be ignored.
At the start of Tuesday's unhinged presidential debate -- as the pandemic continued to rage outside the walls of Case Western University -- the American people were offered an anemic vision for promoting and expanding public health. In the shadow of more than 200,000 deaths from the novel coronavirus, viewers heard pushback on the use of masks, critiques of publicly funded healthcare, and lies about nonexistent plans to mend a broken and inhumane healthcare system.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell presses forward to stack the Supreme Court with another judge who threatens the Affordable Care Act, which would risk kicking 20 million more people off Medicaid.
Across the United States, poor and dispossessed people cannot wait for our politicians to act. This week, in states including Kansas, Maine, Alabama, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Vermont, and Pennsylvania, people are coming together in "Medicaid Marches" to demand their right to health and healthcare.
They know that Black people are dying at twice the rate of white people and that poverty is the highest risk factor for people of all races. They know that the United States now accounts for over 20 percent of worldwide deaths, despite having only 5 percent of the world's population and that this was entirely preventable.
These Medicaid Marches are being led by the uninsured and underinsured, unhoused people, low-wage, essential and undocumented workers, healthcare workers, clergy, and others. The marches are the first coordinated nationwide push of the Nonviolent Medicaid Army, a vehicle to build the power of poor and dispossessed people, led by those on or excluded from Medicaid, which remains the only public healthcare option for the 140 million poor and low-income people in the country. This emerging new force is modeled after what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. envisioned as a "multi-racial, intergenerational, nonviolent army of the poor."
Over the next few days, Medicaid marchers are moving their rallies from the operations of corporate healthcare profiteers (hospitals, pharmaceutical and insurance corporations) to state houses, state prisons, and police stations. People from all walks of life will march to dramatize the ways in which governments defend private profits over human lives. Amid so many concurrent crises, they are drawing the connection between all forms of state violence, from physical force to immoral policies that suffocate life.
In Pennsylvania, marchers in Lancaster will call for justice for Ricardo Munoz, a poor, Black and Latinx man gunned down by police in the midst of a mental health crisis. Just a week before his killing, the Lancaster City Council voted unanimously in favor of a proposal by the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center to rezone their former hospital building, closed in 2019, opening the door for the development of luxury housing.
Ricardo's unnecessary death stands as a stark reminder of what happens when healthcare infrastructure is defunded and mental health services are shredded. As is the case in Lancaster, the void left by inadequate and inaccessible healthcare is too often filled by the crisis of police violence in poor communities of color.
A January 2020 study found that while the United States spends more on healthcare as a share of the economy than other similar countries, it has the lowest life expectancy, highest chronic disease burden, highest suicide rates, and highest rate of avoidable deaths among those countries.
Mortality rates among Black infants and maternal mortality rates among Black women are disproportionately high, indigenous people have a life expectancy that is 5.5 years lower than the national average, and at least 250,000 people die every year from poverty and inequality.
In 2018, there were 87 million people who were uninsured or underinsured. This year, close to 12 million people have already lost their employer-sponsored healthcare. Millions fall into a coverage gap where private insurance is too expensive but their income is above the Medicaid cutoff. Approximately 22,000-27,000 die every year from being uninsured. And state legislatures around the country are making it clear that they will seek to fill the budget holes created by the pandemic-triggered global economic crisis by cutting life-saving public programs like Medicaid.
These numbers paint a painful picture, but the Nonviolent Medicaid Army knows that it is not dramatic statistics or studies that will win the day. It will take a unified force of poor and dispossessed people, united across racial, geographic, and all other lines of division, that is absolutely clear that denial of healthcare amounts to policy violence on a mass scale.
Fully funding Medicaid, and expanding it to all U.S. residents, is not beyond our means. Just one military contract could cover the cost of expanding Medicaid in 14 states. Although we are constantly sold the lie of scarcity, we have the money to fully fund universal single-payer healthcare, if only our government wanted to.
In Kansas, Claire Chadwick, an essential worker who contracted Covid-19 at her workplace, could not afford to be hospitalized and was never treated for her symptoms. She still suffers from shortness of breath and may have long-term health consequences that will continue beyond her ability to pay. Claire and others are organizing two Medicaid Marches with the Kansas Poor People's Campaign: A National Call For Moral Revival.
Anthony Prince, with the California Chapter of the National Union of the Homeless is joining the Nonviolent Medicaid Army because homeless people, whose ranks are growing every day, are in the crosshairs of the crises of healthcare, housing, and police violence. Every year, homeless people have to reapply for Medi-Cal. They can't list a street as their location of care and providers don't even have to accept this state-based insurance program.
In North Carolina, low-wage workers like Eshawney Gaston with Raise Up 15 and others are calling for healthcare for all, a voice to set health and safety standards on the job, and safety protections for incarcerated people. Leaders like Eshany clearly see that low-wage workers are disproportionately Black and Brown and that healthcare and workplace safety issues are not just a health or labor issue but a racial justice issue.
As millions more in this country are thrown into the ranks of the unemployed or underemployed, the demand for Medicaid will skyrocket. And as the pandemic continues to ravage lives and communities, denying health care is not an option. Despite the prattle on the debate stage, healthcare remains one of the top concerns on the minds of the American people headed into the November election.
The Nonviolent Medicaid Army seeks to organize this growing social force -- the poor and dispossessed -- in the fight for healthcare as a human right.
Within a system that seeks to profit off our pain, sickness, and death, this is a demand that can no longer be ignored.
"Something is very broken and this is why people are so disenchanted," one commenter said.
Amid growing discontent over surging economic inequality in the U.S.—and the Trump administration's elevation of unelected billionaire Elon Musk to the upper reaches of the federal government—the New York state comptroller's report on rising Wall Street bonuses was met with condemnation on Wednesday.
"Something is very broken and this is why people are so disenchanted," wrote one commenter on an article about the report at The Washington Post. "There is no American dream. Just fat cats getting fatter."
Another added that "the inequity of taxation on wealth in this country is shameful."
New York Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli lauded Wall Street's "very strong performance" in 2024 as he announced the average bonus paid to employees in the securities industry reached $244,700 last year—up 31.5% from 2023—as Wall Street's profits skyrocketed by 90%. The bonus pool reached a record $47.5 billion.
But as researcher Rob Galbraith pointed out on social media, the record-breaking take-home pay of Wall Street executives was 3.5 times the median household income for a family in Erie County, New York—leaving doubt that many workers in the state will immediately join in celebrating what DiNapoli said was "good news for New York's economy and our fiscal position" due to the bonuses' impacts on tax revenue.
"Tens of thousands of NYC families are about to lose their childcare unless we come up with another $1 billion in the state budget," said state Rep. Zohran Mamdani (D-36), who is running to be mayor of New York City, in response to the announcement.
The average bonus for Wall Street employees was about four times the salary of the median full-time U.S. worker's earnings for 2024, which came to about $62,000 or $1,200 per week.
DiNapoli's estimate was released a week after voters at a town hall in a Republican district in Nebraska shouted, "Tax the rich!" at Rep. Mike Flood (R-Neb.) when he expressed support for Musk's slashing of public spending and claimed such cuts are necessary to balance the budget.
In recent weeks, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) have drawn crowds of tens of thousands of people to hear them speak on their Fighting Oligarchy tour—leading the congresswoman to proclaim, "What is happening right now is different."
"We need to be taxing the rich on the floor of the Congress," said Ocasio-Cortez in Arizona last week, drawing loud applause. "We need to be establishing guaranteed healthcare on the floor of the Congress. We need to be passing a living wage on the floor of the Congress."
However, Congress is currently controlled by Republicans working to cut federal programs that serve working people to pay for tax cuts benefiting rich individuals and corporations.
"This isn't fiscal responsibility. It's a political decision to let preventable diseases spread—to ignore science, lend legitimacy to anti-vaccine extremism, and dismantle the infrastructure that protects us all."
Public health experts and other critics on Wednesday condemned the Trump administration's decision to cut off funding to the global vaccine alliance Gavi, which the organization estimates could result in the deaths of over 1 million children.
"Abhorrent. Evil. Indefensible," Atlantic staff writer Clint Smith said on social media in response to exclusive reporting from The New York Times, which obtained documents including a 281-page spreadsheet that "the skeletal remains" of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) sent to Congress on Monday.
The leaked materials detail 898 awards that the Trump administration plans to continue and 5,341 it intends to end. A spokesperson for the U.S. State Department, which runs the gutted USAID, confirmed the list is accurate and said that "each award terminated was reviewed individually for alignment with agency and administration priorities."
The United States contributes 13% of Gavi's budget and the terminated grant was worth $2.6 billion through 2030, according to the Times. Citing the alliance, the newspaper noted that cutting off U.S. funds "may mean 75 million children do not receive routine vaccinations in the next five years, with more than 1.2 million children dying as a result."
"The administration's attempt to unilaterally walk away from its Gavi commitment raises serious legal questions and should be challenged."
Responding to the Trump administration's move in a social media thread on Wednesday, Gavi said that U.S. support for the alliance "is vital" and with it, "we can save over 8 million lives over the next five years and give millions of children a better chance at a healthy, prosperous future."
"But investing in Gavi brings other benefits for our world and the American people. Here's why: By maintaining global stockpiles of vaccines against deadly diseases like Ebola, mpox, and yellow fever, we help keep America safe. These diseases do not respect borders, they can cross continents in hours and cost billions of dollars," Gavi continued.
The alliance explained that "aside from national security, investing in Gavi means smart economics too. Every dollar we invest in lower income countries generates a return of $54. This helps countries develop and communities thrive, taking away pressure to migrate in search of a better life elsewhere."
"The countries Gavi supports, too, see the benefit in our model: Every year they pay more towards the cost of their own immunisation program, bringing forward the day when they transition from our support completely," the group noted. "Our goal is to ultimately put ourselves out of business."
"For 25 years, the USA and Gavi have had the strongest of partnerships," the alliance concluded. "Without its help, we could not have halved child mortality, saved 18 million lives or helped 19 countries transition from our support (some becoming donors themselves). We hope this partnership can continue."
Many other opponents of the decision also weighed in on social media. Eric Reinhart, a political anthropologist, social psychiatrist, and psychoanalytic clinician in the United States, said, "A sick country insists on a sick world."
Dr. Heather Berlin, an American neuroscientist and clinical psychologist, sarcastically said: "Oh yes, this will surely end well. Good thing the U.S. has an invisible shield around it to protect us from 'foreign' diseases."
Some Times readers also praised the reporting. Dr. Jonathan Marro—a pediatric oncologist, bioethicist, health services researcher, and educator in Massachusetts—called the article "excellent but appalling," while Patrick Gaspard, a distinguished senior fellow at the Center for American Progress and its action fund, said that it was "crushing to read this important story."
The newspaper noted that "the memo to Congress presents the plan for foreign assistance as a unilateral decision. However because spending on individual health programs such as HIV or vaccination is congressionally allocated, it is not clear that the administration has legal power to end those programs. This issue is currently being litigated in multiple court challenges."
Liza Barrie, Public Citizen's campaign director for global vaccines access, also highlighted that point in a Wednesday statement. She said that "the Trump administration's decision to end U.S. funding for Gavi will cost more than a million children's lives, make America less secure. It abandons 25 years of bipartisan commitment to global immunization and undermines the very systems that help prevent deadly outbreaks from reaching our own doorsteps."
"Vaccines are the most cost-effective public health tool ever developed," Barrie continued. "This isn't fiscal responsibility. It's a political decision to let preventable diseases spread—to ignore science, lend legitimacy to anti-vaccine extremism, and dismantle the infrastructure that protects us all. In their shocking incompetence, the Trump administration will do it all without saving more than a rounding error in the budget, if that."
"Congress has authority over foreign assistance funding," she stressed. "The administration's attempt to unilaterally walk away from its Gavi commitment raises serious legal questions and should be challenged. Lawmakers must stand up for the rule of law, and for the belief that the value of a child’s life is not determined by geography."
"The way it was told to us is we are effectively closing the agency because it's not possible for us to do our statutory work with the amount of staff that's being allocated," one employee said.
This is a developing story... Please check back for possible updates...
The vast majority of the employees at a small but impactful federal agency tasked with resolving workplace conflict were told Wednesday that they will be placed on administrative leave. The news was first reported by the Federal News Network.
"There is a very skeletal crew that is going to be retained," said one employee with Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS), who spoke to Common Dreams on the condition of anonymity. "The way it was told to us is we are effectively closing the agency because it's not possible for us to do our statutory work with the amount of staff that's being allocated."
Managers told employees about the changes during multiple meetings held on Wednesday morning with the agency's different regional branches. About a dozen employees will remain on, according to Federal News Network.
The agency, which employs roughly 220 workers according to a budget document submitted to Congress in March 2024, has a mandate to assist parties in labor disputes "affecting commerce to settle such disputes through conciliation and mediation."
According to a one-pager from the agency, FMCS conducted over 5,400 mediated negotiations and provided over 10,000 arbitration panels in fiscal year 2024. The agency estimates that it saves the economy more than $500 million dollars annually while operating with an annual budget of $55 million—or less than 0.0014% of the total federal budget.
U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order earlier this month mandating that FMCS and six other government entities be eliminated "to the maximum extent consistent with applicable law."
The other programs and agencies impacted by Trump's executive order are the United States Agency for Global Media; the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in the Smithsonian Institution; the Institute of Museum and Library Services; the United States Interagency Council on Homelessness; the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund; and the Minority Business Development Agency.
As of Wednesday afternoon, a note on the agency's homepage said that FMCS was reviewing the recent executive order and that the "requirements outlined in these orders may affect some services or information currently provided on this website."
An automatic reply email from FMCS's director of congressional and public affairs, Greg Raelson, states that Raelson is "no longer with FMCS due to the recent Reduction in Force (RIF) plan."
"Working at FMCS has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career, and I am deeply saddened to witness such drastic and short-sighted measures taken against a congressionally established agency that has played such a critical role in serving our nation and taxpayers since 1947," Raelson wrote in the automatic reply email.