Independent. Relentless. Reader-funded. Free for all. Join us today.<a href="[link removed]><img src="[link removed]" alt="" border="0" /></a>
Email hero: ProPublica: Independent journalism belongs to the public -- and is powered by your support. <[link removed]>
Dear Reader,
So much of what’s happened this year has been unprecedented.
Major news is breaking constantly, with consequential decisions being made, unmade, struck down in court and renegotiated every day. How our government works, who it works for and how the powerful are held accountable are all in flux. In a changing political landscape that often feels chaotic and overwhelming by design <[link removed]>, ProPublica is marshaling every resource to provide an independent, verifiable account of what’s happening. We are documenting, investigating, digging deep and talking to sources, and we report back to you everything we find (once it is fact-checked).
Just last month, we published six major investigations:
We exposed how FBI Director Kash Patel granted waivers to Deputy Director Dan Bongino and two other senior FBI staff members <[link removed]>, exempting them from passing polygraph exams normally required to gain access to America’s most sensitive classified information, according to a former senior FBI official and several other government officials.
We revealed potential conflicts of interest involving Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem <[link removed]>. Under her leadership, DHS invoked the “national emergency” at the border to skirt competitive bidding rules for a $220 million taxpayer-funded ad campaign. We found that a firm with deep ties to Noem secretly benefited from the deal. As you may recall, we reported in September how Noem fast-tracked millions in disaster aid to a Florida tourist attraction at the request of a donor <[link removed]>. (In a written response, DHS said it had no involvement in the selection of subcontractors.)
We detailed DHS’ midnight operation at an apartment building in Chicago’s South Shore neighborhood <[link removed]>, one of the most publicized immigration raids to take place in a U.S. city in modern history. The Trump administration has celebrated this raid as a huge success, claiming Venezuelan Tren de Aragua gang members with guns, drugs and explosives had taken over the building. Our reporters vigorously investigated this story over the course of five weeks, finding little evidence that this was true. Reporter Melissa Sanchez described her experience as “some of the most intense reporting” she has done.
We published a deep-dive look at how Donald Trump has leveraged his clemency power to reward allies, donors and cultural-war figures <[link removed]>, often bypassing the usual review process and favoring allies and supporters. Meanwhile, countless other applicants who followed the formal pathway established by the Justice Department remain stuck in limbo, highlighting a two-tiered system of justice.
We revealed how Fox News repeatedly used misleading footage <[link removed]> to portray Portland, Oregon, as engulfed in violence in 2025, thereby influencing President Donald Trump’s decision to deploy the National Guard. Our journalists examined months of the network’s coverage and reviewed more than 700 video clips posted to social media by protesters, counterprotesters and others in the three months preceding Trump’s decision.
And just two weeks after we reported that the Trump administration was going to change eligibility requirements for Social Security disability payments <[link removed]> — which could have led 830,000 people, disproportionately blue-collar workers in red states, to lose benefits — the administration abandoned those plans <[link removed]>. In a meeting with a small team of advocates for people with disabilities, Russell Vought, the powerful White House budget director <[link removed]>, said, “I know that this is being written about.” But, he added, the rule change “isn’t going to be happening.”
There’s so much more to come.
We’re knee-deep in investigations right now, and we need your help. As a people-powered, nonprofit newsroom, we have no owners or shareholders, no paywalls or sponsors. Our funding, our fearlessness and our editorial independence comes from you. Stand with us, as we carry our investigations into 2026.
Amid tumult and sweeping change, this much will remain constant: ProPublica will continue to produce investigative journalism in the public interest, to track spheres of influence and calculate uncalculated harms. With your support, we are committed to connecting the dots in what may feel like chaos and telling stories with depth, clarity and focus so readers will know not just what happened, but why it matters.
Thanks so much,
Tova Genesen <[link removed]>
Proud ProPublican <[link removed]>
Donate to ProPublica <[link removed]>
Become a ProPublican
Join over 80,000 smart, generous, discerning readers who believe that fact-based journalism matters, and donate money to make sure that ProPublica remains financially healthy. It doesn’t take much to become a ProPublican — even a $1 donation will make you one <[link removed]>. Interested in donating through your IRA, donor advised fund, or with stocks? Email us <mailto:
[email protected]> or click here for more info <[link removed]>.
ProPublica is a 501(c)3 and our EIN is 14-2007220.
VenmoApple PayGoogle PayPayPal
This email was sent to
[email protected]. View it in your browser <[link removed]>. Update your email preferences <[link removed]>.
ProPublica • 155 Ave of the Americas, 13th Floor • New York, NY 10013
Stop fundraising emails <[link removed][]=Do+Not+Solicit> Unsubscribe from all emails <[link removed]>
ProPublica is a nonprofit, and we get the bulk of our funding from individuals like you. Hence, these requests for donations. Prefer not to get these emails? No problem, unsubscribe from only solicitation emails above. ☝