Dear John,
This weekend, we learned that after largely successful court challenges, the Trump Pentagon is withdrawing some National Guard troops from major U.S. cities.
The news came just days after NPP’s Hanna Homestead and The Intercept calculated that the Trump regime’s occupations of U.S. cities like Chicago and Washington, D.C. are costing at least $473 million so far.
The victory shows how the combination of well-founded legal challenges, popular opposition and good information can stop authoritarianism in its tracks. Now, we’re turning our attention back to the Pentagon budget overall. The last thing this authoritarian Pentagon needs is more money to enable its bad actions.
And yet, after the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, Congress still hasn’t acted to save millions of Americans from spiking healthcare premiums - the whole ostensible reason for the shutdown. Preventing those healthcare cost spikes would cost about $35 billion per year. But Senators have approved a $32 billion hike for the Pentagon.
This Pentagon doesn’t deserve one more dime. We’ve joined a powerful coalition to oppose adding billions more to the Pentagon budget. We can stop authoritarianism and put our tax dollars to use helping ordinary people. Let’s keep at it. In solidarity, Alliyah, Hanna and Lindsay |
|
|
TRADEOFF: MILITARY IN OUR STREETS VS. AFFORDABLE HEALTHCARE |
The $473,265,435 spent so far on Trump's National Guard occupations in Washington DC, Los Angeles, Portland, Chicago, and Memphis could restore full Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies for nearly half a million people (465,000 people).
Instead, Trump's deployments continue while millions of people will see their health insurance premiums spike, increasing by an average of $1,016 per enrollee. The cost of these deployments is only rising the longer they go on, and any new deployments would drive the cost even higher. Our cities are not training grounds. Our people should have affordable healthcare.
Share on Instagram, Bluesky, X/Twitter, and Facebook
|
Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS) is Chair of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Photo courtesy of Getty Images |
SENATE CHOOSES $32 BILLION FOR PENTAGON OVER HEALTHCARE |
As the government shutdown ends, millions of Americans who receive health insurance through government insurance marketplaces will see their health insurance premiums double (or more). Solving the problem was supposed to be the key to ending the shutdown, but in the end a group of Senators voted to reopen the government without a solution.
But in the midst of the shutdown, Senators were still busy. They approved a $32 billion increase for the Pentagon on a bipartisan basis, approving the increase by a vote of 77-20 as part of a larger bill, the National Defense Authorization Act. The price tag for a single year of extending the subsidies would be about $35 billion, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
|
7 PROGRESSIVE POLICY WINS FOR HUMAN NEEDS OVER MILITARISM |
On Election Day, voters around the country chose fair taxation, food programs, and public schools, and said “no” to authoritarian city occupations and masked abductions of immigrants. The results were a repudiation of authoritarianism, oligarchy, and militarism - and strongly suggested voters still see the potential for government to do good.
Here are 7 examples of winning progressive issues at the polls in November. |
|
|
“We demand an end to militarism, occupation, and genocide in Palestine and across the world, along with the defence of peoples’ rights. This entails dismantling military alliances, shutting down foreign bases, and protecting human rights and environmental defenders.” – Opening statement for the 30th Conference of Parties (COP30)
delivered by peoples movements and civil society |
|
|
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER
|
|
|
|