The second-term president likely will seek to cut off spending that lawmakers have already appropriated, setting off a constitutional struggle within the branches. If successful, he could wield the power to punish perceived foes.<a href="[link removed]><img src="[link removed]" alt="" border="0" /></a>
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The Big Story
November 26, 2024 · View in browser <[link removed]>
In today's newsletter: Trump’s plans to seize the power of the purse <[link removed]> from Congress; how to help our reporting <[link removed]>; immigrants’ resentment <[link removed]> over new arrivals; and more from our newsroom.
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How Trump Plans to Seize the Power of the Purse From Congress <[link removed]>
The second-term president likely will seek to cut off spending that lawmakers have already appropriated, setting off a constitutional struggle within the branches. If successful, he could wield the power to punish perceived foes.
Read story <[link removed]>
🔎 What we’re watching
Molly Redden: I'm reporting on how the Trump/Vance administration will carry out its cultural agenda. <[link removed]>
During Donald Trump’s second presidency, ProPublica will continue our focus on the areas most in need of scrutiny. Here are some of the issues our reporters will be watching <[link removed]> — and how to get in touch with them.
Molly Redden, the author of today's feature story on impoundment <[link removed]>, is reporting on the new administration's cultural agenda. Redden says she's "interested in hearing from federal workers seeing rightward shifts in policy on civil rights, religion, free expression, LGBTQ+ rights and reproductive health, and people with insight into how ideological groups and donors who helped reelect Trump are trying to influence White House policymaking."
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Quoted
“It’s not fair. Those of us who have been here for years get nothing.”
— Rosa, one of the many undocumented Mexican immigrants who’d settled nearly 30 years ago in Whitewater, Wisconsin, on why her feelings of indifference toward the Nicaraguan asylum-seekers who began moving into town a few years ago turned to frustration and resentment <[link removed]>.
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Immigrants’ Resentment Over New Arrivals Helped Boost Trump’s Popularity With Latino Voters <[link removed]>
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A Third Woman Died Under Texas’ Abortion Ban. Doctors Are Avoiding D&Cs and Reaching for Riskier Miscarriage Treatments. <[link removed]>
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Illinois’ AG Said It’s Illegal for Schools to Use Police to Ticket Students. But His Office Told Only One District. <[link removed]>
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Segregation Academies in Mississippi Are Benefiting From Public Dollars, as They Did in the 1960s <[link removed]>
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How Lincare Cashed In on the Disastrous Recall of Philips Breathing Machines — at the Expense of Patients <[link removed]>
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