Ban on deporting U.S. citizens removed from DHS funding bill, congresswoman warns.
Rachel Maddow relays a warning by Rep. Veronica Escobar that her amendment to the bill to fund Homeland Security that would ban the deportation of Americans citizens was stripped out of the bill by White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller before the bill was voted on.
Millions of cisgender women and transgender people would be kept from voting or proving their citizenship under legislation being pushed by Congressional Republicans.
The Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act would require all American citizens registering to vote or updating their registration information to present documentary proof of citizenship in person. For the vast majority of Americans, this would be a passport or an original birth certificate, American Progress reports.
Government-issued driver’s licenses—including REAL IDs—as well as military or tribal IDs do not satisfy the bill’s requirements.
Women who have taken their husbands' surnames and transgender people who have made a legal name change would not be allowed to register to vote unless they have in their possession a valid passport.
84 percent of women who marry change their surname, meaning as many as 69 million American women do not have a birth certificate with their legal name on it and thereby could not use their birth certificate to prove citizenship. The SAVE Act makes no mention of being able to show a marriage certificate or change-of-name documentation.
On November 6, 2025, Lambda Legal reports that the U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision that means that new passports issued by the State Department will show a person’s sex assigned at birth, rather than their gender identity. There will not be a choice of an X gender marker. This applies to new passport applications, renewals, and replacements for lost or damaged passports.
The SAVE ACT passed the House last session under the auspices of keeping republican politicans in power, but that was before Trump's goons were roaming US streets, randomly executing legal observers, using children as bait, and imprisoning US citizens who don't have a valid passport or birth certificate in their possession.
The Save Act is a direct threat to our existence. Please call your lawmaker today. The Save Act isn't listed on the 5calls app, but it's an excellent tool to expedite the process.
U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. speaking with attendees at the Memorial for Charlie Kirk at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona / Wikipedia
HHS has agreed to stop threatening funding for hospitals and providers offering health care to transgender adolescents while a lawsuit by 22 states moves forward.
That means providers can keep caring for patients, and families can focus on what matters most: helping their trans kids thrive, GLAD Law said on Instagram.
However, the damage has been done as some hospitals complied in advance when threatened by HHS.
Dr. Susan J. Kressly, the president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said HHS was departing from “the longstanding principle that health care policy should be grounded in scientific evidence, clinical expertise, and the needs of children and families.”
"The position of the American Academy of Pediatrics is that the prohibition of gender-affirming Care (GAC) is a form of child maltreatment, and denying GAC is medical neglect, emotional abuse, and child abuse. The weaponization of child abuse in the discourse around GAC is fallacious and counterproductive, and it has led to numerous real threats to children’s safety and well-being. (Pediatrics published December 20, 2023)
"As a transgender adult who has benefited from gender afirming care for the past 30 years, I implore U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to reconsider this rule."
I realize testifying in front of your executioner is counterintuitive, but I had to take a stand for our children.
Find a protest and go there. Say her name, Renée Good.
Jonathan Ross, the ICE agent who shot three times through Good's car window as she drove away, has served with ICE for ten years in Minneapolis in its apprehension and deportation division. Ross, who had previously been dragged by a car, circled Good's car and stood in front of it while she was being given orders from multiple agents.
DOJ use of force policy.
He broke the law and murdered a US citizen. Full stop.
Minnesota county attorney says 'We have jurisdiction' in fatal ICE shooting.' However, they have been barred from doing so by the Federal Government. Without a local investigation, we will never know why Renée Good told Ross she "wasn't mad at him". Did she recognize him from a previous encounter? Was this a revenge killing?
With little fanfare the CDC has updated its recommendations for COVID-19 vaccinations, according to Dr. Leana S. Wen, who writes an opinion column for the Washington Post.
Dr. Wen observed that "Careful, evidence-based vaccine guidance now arrives with little fanfare."
"One of the most common questions readers have asked me in recent months is whether older adults can receive a second dose of the 2025-2026 covid vaccine. The confusion is understandable; federal health officials have narrowed the government’s recommendations for younger and lower-risk groups, with little clarity on what those changes mean for seniors."
"As it turns out, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention not only permits a second dose but recommends it. The agency quietly updated its guidance in November to encourage adults 65 and older to receive two shots of this season’s vaccine, ideally six months apart to optimize protection. (People can get them as soon as two or three months after the first shot, depending on which vaccine they received.)"
"The same guidance applies to those who are moderately or severely immunocompromised, who are also eligible to receive two doses of the 2025-2026 covid vaccine. Importantly, individuals do not need documentation to prove immunocompromised status, and vaccinators are explicitly instructed not to deny vaccination because of a lack of medical records or other paperwork," Dr Wen wrote.