Top News | Calls for Schumer's Ouster After Shutdown Surrender

 


Monday, November 10, 2025

■ Today's Top News 


UN Climate Chief: Refusal to Halt Planetary Destruction Will 'Never, Ever Be Forgiven'

"We must move much, much, faster on both reductions of emissions and strengthening resilience," Simon Stiell said at COP30 in Brazil.

By Jessica Corbett

At the opening of the United Nations summit known as COP30 on Monday, UN Framework Convention on Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell warned those gathered in Brazil of the “indisputable” dangers of inaction.

“Ten years ago in Paris, we were designing the future—a future that would clearly see the curve of emissions bend downwards,” he said, referring to the interntaionl agreement to reduce planet-heating pollution in hopes of keeping temperature rise this century at 1.5°C, relative to preindustrial levels. The global average temperature last year was above that limit.

“The emissions curve has been bent downwards. Because of what was agreed in halls like this, with governments legislating, and markets responding. But I am not sugar-coating it. We have so much more work to do,” Stiell stressed. “We must move much, much, faster on both reductions of emissions and strengthening resilience.”

“The science is clear: We can and must bring temperatures back down to 1.5°C after any temporary overshoot,” he continued. A UN assessment from last week found that under Paris Agreement countries’ recently submitted plans, or Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), the global temperature could soar to 2.3-2.5°C.

Stiell said: “We find ourselves here in Belém, at the mouth of the Amazon. And we can learn a lot from this mighty river. The Amazon isn’t a single entity, rather a vast river system supported and powered by over a thousand tributaries. To accelerate implementation, the COP process must be supported in the same way—powered by the many streams of international cooperation.”

“We don’t need to wait for late NDCs to slowly trickle in, to spot the gap and design the innovations necessary to tackle it,” he noted. “To falter whilst megadroughts wreck national harvests, sending food prices soaring, makes zero sense, economically or politically. To squabble while famines take hold, forcing millions to flee their homelands, this will never be forgotten, as conflicts spread.”

“While climate disasters decimate the lives of millions, when we already have the solutions, this will never, ever be forgiven,” he argued. “The economics of this transition are as indisputable as the costs of inaction. Solar and wind are now the lowest-cost power in 90% of the world. Renewables overtook coal this year as the world’s top energy source. Investment in clean energy and infrastructure will hit another record high this year.”

Highlighting a previous agreement to deliver at least $300 billion in climate finance, with developed countries taking the lead, Stiell called for moving toward $1.3 trillion, along with progress on adaptation and inclusive and just transitions. He declared, “In this arena of COP30, your job here is not to fight one another—your job here is to fight this climate crisis, together.”

UN Secretary-General António Guterres and Brazilian leaders, including President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, also emphasized the importance of collaboration at the summit to take on the fossil fuel-driven climate emergency.

According to the Associated Press:

André Corrêa do Lago, president of this year’s conference, emphasized that negotiators must engage in “mutirão,” derived from a local Indigenous word that refers to a group uniting for a task.

Complicating those calls is the United States, where President Donald Trump has long denied the existence of climate change. His administration did not send high-level negotiators and is withdrawing for the second time from the 10-year-old Paris Agreement, the first global pact to fight climate change.

As Common Dreams reported last week, Amnesty International secretary general Agnès Callamard urged all governments attending COP30 “to resist aligning with the Trump administration’s denial of the accelerating climate crisis and instead demonstrate true climate leadership.”

“In the face of President Trump’s rejection of science coupled with the intensified lobbying for fossil fuels, global leaders must redouble their efforts to take urgent climate action—with or without the US,” Callamard asserted.

An analysis of COP26-COP29 published Friday by Kick Big Polluters Out coalition found that “over 5,350 fossil fuel lobbyists have attended UN climate negotiations in just four years, with 90 of the corporations they represent responsible for nearly 60% of all global oil and gas production.”

“Three decades of climate negotiations have failed to justly end fossil fuels, scale up real solutions, and deliver climate action that centers people and the planet, not Big Polluters’ profits,” the coalition said. “Until the well-evidenced obstruction of the fossil fuel industry is addressed and strong, lasting protections are in place, COP30 and all future COPs are pre-destined to fail.”




'Reign of Terror' in Chicago as Locals Suffer Under 'Secret Police' Sent by Trump

"I am flooded with stories. There are so many I cannot remember them all; cannot keep straight who was gassed, beaten, abducted, or shot."

By Brad Reed

Chicago residents are increasingly resisting operations being conducted by federal immigration enforcement operations being conducted in their city, while at the same time warning the rest of the country about the trauma federal agents are inflicting on their communities.

In a lengthy article published in the Chicago Tribune over the weekend, journalist Andrew Carter documented how residents of the Little Village neighborhood in Chicago, which has been the target of multiple raids over the last month, have created a network of neighbors who carry whistles with them at all times so they can alert people when federal agents are in the area.

Baltazar Enriquez, president of the community counsel in Little Village, told Carter that he began walking around wearing a whistle this past June, and he said that since then “it grew like wildfire,” and spread to other neighborhoods in the city.

One person who has joined in the resistance to the immigration raids is Lisa Porter, a 53-year-old suburban mother who told Carter that she had never been much of an activist until she found herself horrified by videos of masked agents snatching people off the streets.

Porter said that she’s been following the lead of other Chicagoans in trying to warn people in her neighborhood whenever federal agents are in the area. In one particularly memorable instance, Porter said she saw a young man mowing a lawn in her neighborhood and told him to keep an eye out for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) patrols that she’d seen earlier.

“They came and took my dad 10 minutes ago,” the young man said in reply.

Kyle Kingsbury, a Chicago-based computer safety researcher, wrote on his personal blog over the weekend about the pervasive sense of fear that has consumed his community ever since immigration officials began ramping up operations earlier this fall.

In his lengthy essay, Kingsbury said that he is constantly receiving messages from neighborhood watch groups alerting him about masked federal agents detaining people while going about their daily lives, including one notorious recent incident where officials dragged a woman out of the local childcare facility where she worked.

“This weight presses on me every day,” he explained. “I am flooded with stories. There are so many I cannot remember them all; cannot keep straight who was gassed, beaten, abducted, or shot. I write to leave a record, to stare at the track of the tornado. I write to leave a warning. I write to call for help.”

Kingsbury also warned that federal immigration officials, whether in the form of ICE or the US Border Patrol, are acting like an unaccountable secret police force akin to those typically seen in totalitarian states.

“I want you to understand, regardless of your politics, the historical danger of a secret police,” he wrote. “What happens when a militia is deployed in our neighborhoods and against our own people. Left unchecked their mandate will grow; the boundaries of acceptable identity and speech will shrink.”

Chicago Alderman Mike Rodriguez, who represents Little Village, told Block Club Chicago on Monday that recent Border Patrol operations in the neighborhood have been like a “reign of terror,” and he noted that agents once again deployed tear gas while making arrests over the weekend.

Despite angry condemnations from local officials and residents, US Border Patrol Commander-at-Large Gregory Bovino appears completely unbowed.

As Block Club Chicago reported, Bovino brought dozens of agents with him on Monday for a photo-op at the famous Cloud Gate sculpture—often called The Bean—in Millennium Park in which they smiled and collectively said “Little Village,” in mocking reference to the neighborhood they’ve been raiding, as photographers snapped pictures.



Trump Healthcare Payment Proposal Sparks Fresh Medicare for All Demands to Fix ‘Broken’ Healthcare System

“These subsidies have to get bigger and bigger and bigger to keep the ACA affordable,” said US Senate candidate Dr. Abdul El-Sayed. “The fight for healthcare right now can’t end with ACA subsidies. It has to be bigger.”

By Stephen Prager

As the government appears poised to reopen, with Republicans having successfully avoided concessions on their goal of eliminating Affordable Care Act tax credits, President Donald Trump has proposed his own solution to the looming explosion in health insurance costs.

By agreeing to reopen the government without a deal, Democrats have given up their main leverage to force Republicans to extend the credits set to expire at the end of the year. If this happens, over 22 million Americans are expected to see their monthly insurance premiums more than double. As enrollment data for next year shows, Americans are already seeing skyrocketing healthcare costs, not just for ACA recipients but for everyone.

While Republicans successfully strong-armed their opposition into caving by using the shutdown to turn the screws on government workers and food stamp recipients, they still have to weather the political fallout of the coming healthcare apocalypse. A poll released Thursday by KFF found that 74% of Americans—half of whom are self-identified Republicans—want to see the credits extended. Three-quarters also say they’d blame either Trump or Republicans in Congress if they weren’t.

On Truth Social Saturday, as a shutdown deal appeared likely, Trump proposed his own idea:

I am recommending to Senate Republicans that the Hundreds of Billions of Dollars currently being sent to money sucking Insurance Companies in order to save the bad Healthcare provided by ObamaCare, BE SENT DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE SO THAT THEY CAN PURCHASE THEIR OWN, MUCH BETTER, HEALTHCARE, and have money left over. In other words, take from the BIG, BAD Insurance Companies, give it to the people, and terminate, per Dollar spent, the worst Healthcare anywhere in the World, ObamaCare.

Trump is correct that under the current scheme, Americans don’t actually receive money directly. But experts warn that while there’s a visceral populist logic to his proposal, the flaws of replacing those annual subsidies with a one-time payment become obvious with the barest of scrutiny, especially when it is paired with a proposal to fully repeal the ACA.

“You have to read between the lines here to imagine what President Trump is proposing,” said Larry Levitt, the executive vice president for health policy at KFF. “It sounds like it could be a plan for health accounts that could be used for insurance that doesn’t cover preexisting conditions, which could create a death spiral in ACA plans that do.”

One of the Senate’s most prominent proponents of eliminating the ACA and other parts of the social safety net, Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.), said he was “writing the bill right now,” and clarified that it would indeed involve “HSA-style accounts” for Americans in place of subsidized insurance.

On Sunday, Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) noted that this was just a reheating of the “same old, tired proposal of repealing the Affordable Care Act, giving people a benefit in the form of a health savings account, but allowing insurance companies once again to cancel policies and refuse to write policies for people who have preexisting health conditions.”

HSAs were a key component of the Republicans’ failed 2017 plan to “repeal and replace” the ACA, which many critics pointed out would allow insurers to skyrocket the costs of insurance for those dealing with preexisting conditions.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who sits on the Senate Committee on Health, EducationLabor, and Pensions (HELP), called Trump’s new plan “unsurprisingly nonsensical.”

“Is he suggesting eliminating health insurance and giving people a few thousand dollars instead?” Murphy asked. “And then when they get a cancer diagnosis, they just go bankrupt?”

But while many Democrats decried yet another effort to dismantle the ACA, some progressives pointed out that health insurance costs, and healthcare costs more generally, have still exploded under Obamacare, which—despite introducing new guardrails—still leaves profit-driven insurance intact and requires all Americans to purchase it.

“Yes, Mr. President: You’re right. We do have ‘the worst healthcare’ of any major country,” replied Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), the HELP committee’s ranking member, who has long decried the profiteering of insurance companies. “Despite spending twice as much per capita, we are the only major country not to guarantee health care to all as a human right. The solution: Medicare for All.”

He was joined by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), who ripped Trump’s plan on Fox News.

“Healthcare premiums... they are going to spike about 100% in some cases,” Khanna said. “Now, if you take the tax credits and you just give them to the American people, who is the president expecting them to buy the plans from? Is he expecting them to get junk insurance?”

“I agree with him that the system is broken,” he continued. “And we should be expanding Medicare to have Medicare for All. But in the meantime, we’ve got to give people help so that their premiums don’t spike.”

On social media, Khanna pointed to a 2020 analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), which found that the US would spend about $650 billion less on healthcare per year in 2030 if it adopted Medicare for All because it would drastically reduce the administrative waste and non-healthcare-related spending inherent to private insurance. It would also allow the government to use its massive leverage as America’s primary insurer to negotiate dramatic price reductions for drugs and medical services.

Those arguments have also been made by Dr. Abdul El-Sayed, a long-time Medicare for All proponent who is running for the open Senate seat in Michigan in 2026. He explained to a crowd that the fact that Republicans “can muck around with subsidies” in the first place is evidence of a broader healthcare crisis that stems from the preeminence of privatized healthcare.

“The very fact that we’re watching as these subsidies have to get bigger and bigger and bigger to keep the ACA affordable, the very fact that we’re relying on Medicaid to be expanded, that, to me, is the reason why in a moment like this, it’s not enough just to protect what we have,” he said.

He continued on social media: “The fight for healthcare right now can’t end with ACA subsidies. It has to be bigger. Too many Americans are suffering over medical debt and spiraling costs. It should be nothing short of Medicare for All.”



'Next Step Is Primaries': Calls for Schumer Ouster After Leading Shutdown Surrender

"Until we elect Democrats that understand that fighting is what we need to do," US Senate primary candidate Graham Platner said, "we're going to find ourselves in this position over and over and over again."

By Julia Conley


One public opinion researcher said Sunday that there may be one positive aspect of the capitulation of eight Senate Democratic Caucus members—none of whom will face voters in a reelection campaign next year—who joined Republicans in voting to end the government shutdown without securing concessions on the central issue of healthcare.

“The only silver lining about this completely pointless, cowardly, and tone-deaf cave is that it’ll accelerate the complete overhaul of the leadership—and god willing, direction—of the Democratic Party,” said Adam Carlson of Zenith Research.

To that end, progressive organizers and lawmakers on Monday morning said that with Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) having reportedly coordinated the “yes” vote from the eight senators, voters must remove the lawmakers from office at their earliest opportunity.

“We want to celebrate a Democratic Party that fights back,” said the grassroots group Indivisible. “But after this latest surrender, the next step is primaries and new leadership. We get the party we demand, and we intend to demand one that fights.”

Ezra Levin, co-founder of the organization, emphasized that anger should be directed not just at the eight Democrats who voted with Republicans on a cloture vote that paved the way to reopening the government without concessions from the GOP.

The eight senators were Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto of NevadaDick Durbin of IllinoisJohn Fetterman of Pennsylvania, Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Angus King of Maine, Jacky Rosen of Nevada, and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, but Levin said many more centrist lawmakers were likely “in on the play.”

On MSNBC Monday, Shaheen acknowledged that Schumer was “kept informed” of the eight senators’ negotiations with the GOP regarding reopening the government.

“It’s the same reason why they scheduled the surrender for after the election this week,” Levin said. “They didn’t want people pissed at Democrats right before an election.”

The elections last week, along with recent polls, revealed that the Republican Party and the White House are the target of ire from US voters, with President Donald Trump himself saying the Democratic victories showed the GOP would have to take action to end the shutdown.

New Republic writer Greg Sargent said that Schumer had given up crucial leverage by caving to the GOP’s demand that the shutdown end and pushing senators to support a deal that contains no restoration of Medicaid funding gutted by the Republicans earlier this year, end to Trump’s recissions that cut billions of dollars in public funding, or extension of Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies.

“You’ve changed the story from ‘GOP hurting millions of Americans to please unpopular, failing, delusional despot who’s destroying his party’ to ‘Dems are too weak and divided in the face of Trump’s strength to take a stand and protect Americans,'” said Sargent, addressing Schumer on social media.

Attorney Max Kennerly suggested that the Sunday night vote revealed more than just the party’s views on the current shutdown, and said Democrats who voted “no” should receive “zero credit until they demand a change in leadership.”

“The coordinated nature of this—none [of the lawmakers who voted yes] are facing voters in 2026—means that either Schumer approved it or failed in his job as Senate [minority] leader to stop it,” said Kennerly.

Schumer, who is up for reelection in 2028, has topped the list of Democratic lawmakers who should face a primary challenge in recent months, following his refusal to endorse New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s campaign and his earlier capitulation to Republicans in March, when he supported a continuing resolution to keep the government funded even though to expanded Trump’s control over congressional spending.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), who is reportedly considering either a 2028 presidential run or a primary challenge to Schumer, suggested the Democratic leader had abandoned the fight to ensure already-high healthcare costs don’t rise for people who buy insurance through the ACA marketplace.

“People want us to hold the line for a reason,” she said. “This is not a matter of appealing to a base. It’s about people’s lives. Working people want leaders whose word means something.”

“Chuck Schumer should step down as Senate minority leader immediately,” said Joseph Geevarghese, executive director of Our Revolution. “If he secretly backed this surrender and voted ‘no’ to save face, he’s a liar. If he couldn’t keep his caucus in line, he’s inept. Either way, he’s proven incapable of leading the fight to prevent healthcare premiums from skyrocketing for millions of Americans. The country can’t afford his failed leadership any longer.”

Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) said the cave provided the latest evidence that “Schumer is no longer effective and should be replaced,” and that “it’s time for those in the back to make it to the front and for the old guard to make way.”

“You’ve had Schumer cheerleading the Iraq War, cheerleading a blank check to [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu, betraying us on the first shutdown,” Khanna told “Breaking Points” host Krystal Ball Monday. “This is the culmination of someone who just doesn’t get it, who doesn’t get how much people are hurting, doesn’t get where the base of this party is.”

In Maine, US Senate candidate Graham Platner—who is facing Gov. Janet Mills in the Democratic primary to unseat Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) after Schumer pushed Mills to join the race—said millions of families had woken up to a “bleak morning” on Monday after the Democratic leader orchestrated the capitulation.

“Now, up the 20 million Americans are going to watch their healthcare premiums double, triple, and in some cases quadruple,” said Platner. “Now we are on a path to watch 15 million Americans possibly lose access to healthcare insurance in the first place. This happened because Chuck Schumer failed in his job yet again, because they do not understand that when we fight, we win.”

“We need to elect leaders that want to fight,” he added, urging voters to call their senators and “tell them that Chuck Schumer can no longer be leader.”

“Until we elect Democrats that understand that fighting is what we need to do,” Platner said, “we’re going to find ourselves in this position over and over and over again.”



Trump Pardons His Co-Conspirators in 2020 Coup Attempt

One policy expert warned the move was likely meant to signal to Republican election officials that if they take actions to steal future elections, "they'll be pardoned."

By Stephen Prager

President Donald Trump has given a “full, complete, and unconditional” pardon to a long list of allies who conspired to help him overturn his loss in the 2020 election.

Late Sunday night, Justice Department attorney Ed Martin posted a list of over 70 people who would receive pardons. Many of the figures included were named as unindicted co-conspirators or charged at the state level for their roles in the plot to knowingly spread false claims of widespread voter fraud in an attempt to push states to reject former President Joe Biden’s victories in key swing states and pressure Vice President Mike Pence into stopping the certification of the election.

Among those pardoned are Trump lawyers Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, who publicly promoted baseless claims of a vast conspiracy against the president to the public, claiming that the election was stolen by a cabal of foreign infiltrators and scheming election officials. They later faced defamation lawsuits for these claims, and in legal proceedings, Giuliani conceded he made false statements about election workers, while Powell’s lawyers argued that “no reasonable person” would conclude her public claims were statements of fact.

Trump also pardoned former chief of staff Mark Meadows, who acted as a facilitator between the president and state officials he attempted to bully into saying he won the election. Aside from the president himself, Meadows was the highest-ranking White House staffer on the phone call in which Trump asked Georgia’s Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” him enough votes to be declared the winner of the election.

Also receiving pardons were attorneys John Eastman and Kenneth Chesebro. They were part of what Pence called Trump’s “gaggle of crackpot lawyers,” who concocted the tortured legal theory that the vice president could declare Biden’s victory in swing states illegitimate and anoint Trump as the winner. Eastman privately admitted to Trump that the scheme was illegal but pressed ahead with it anyway, culminating in the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol, during which Trump supporters chanted, “Hang Mike Pence,” and tried to stop the election results from being certified.

Also pardoned were several of the right-wing activists who signed documents falsely claiming to be electors from states that had certified the election for Biden.

Crucially, the individuals listed never faced federal criminal indictments for their election subversion attempts. However, dozens of those on the list were charged with crimes in swing states—including GeorgiaArizonaWisconsin, and Nevada—related to the effort. The pardons mean these officials cannot be indicted at the federal level for these crimes.

Though the pardon list is broad, giving clemency to “all United States citizens for conduct relating to the advice, creation, organization, execution, submission, support, voting activities, participation in or advocacy for or of any slate or proposed slate of presidential electors… as well for any conduct relating to their efforts to expose voting fraud and vulnerabilities in the 2020 presidential election,” it explicitly states that it “does not apply” to Trump himself, indicating that his legal team is not yet ready to test the theory that the president can pardon himself.

Still, the language Martin used in the announcement—“No MAGA left behind”—signaled the goal of creating a two-tiered justice system where those who display loyalty to Trump are immune from the law.

“The stated goal of the pardon attorney is to reward the president’s political supporters,” wrote Matt Gertz, a senior fellow for Media Matters for America on social media.

It coincides with Trump’s broader efforts to give get-out-of-jail-free cards to anyone who gives him political support. Immediately after returning to office, he gave blanket pardons to more than 1,500 people who participated in the violent effort to overturn the election on his behalf on January 6. Since then, his Justice Department has moved to fire or suspend those who brought cases against them, even for unrelated crimes.

Simply being a public Trump supporter has often been enough for people to be let off the hook for petty crimes. Florida healthcare executive Paul Walczak, who was convicted of federal tax evasion, reportedly got a pardon after his mother made a substantial donation to Trump’s Super PAC. He later gave pardons to reality stars Todd and Julie Chrisley, a pair of vocal supporters, who were convicted of bank and tax fraud. He also pardoned Virginia Sheriff Scott Jenkins, another prominent supporter, who was convicted in a bribery scandal for accepting “cash for badges.”

“Pardon attorney Ed Martin explicitly linked the pardons to his ‘No MAGA left behind’ mantra—tweeting the news in reply to a post that said exactly that,” noted senior Lawfare editor Anna Bower. “Ironically, Martin also leads the Weaponization Working Group, which probes alleged ‘politicization’ of the Justice Department.”

Tyson Slocum, an energy policy expert at Public Citizenwarned that these pardons send a clear message to those hoping to help Trump subvert future elections.

“Trump’s pardons of Republicans who have committed crimes,” he said, “is a setup to encourage state-level Republican election officials to take actions to illegally steal the election, knowing that if they succeed, they’ll be pardoned.”



PENNSYLVANIA: MANY SUPPORTED & STOOD BY JOHN FETTERMAN, BUT HE CONTINUES TO PROVE HIS INCOMPETENTCE! HE DOES NOT STAND FOR HIS CONSTITUENTS, NOR DOES HE EVEN COMPREHEND THE ISSUES! 

PENNSYLVANIA: TIME TO REPLACE JOHN FETTERMAN!

'Absolutely Pathetic': Senate Democrats Denounced for Caving to GOP in Shutdown Fight

"Let’s be clear — this proposal isn’t a compromise, it’s a capitulation," said one progressive lawmaker in the US House.

By Jon Queally

Fury on the progressive left and among lawmakers who opposed such “capitulation” to the Republican Party erupted overnight after a handful of Senate Democrats joined with their GOP counterparts in a procedural vote on Sunday night to end the government shutdown without gaining any meaningful concessions.

With the support of eight members of the Democratic caucus—Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto of NevadaDick Durbin of IllinoisJohn Fetterman of Pennsylvania, Maggie Hassan of New Hampshire, Tim Kaine of Virginia, Angus King of Maine, Jacky Rosen of Nevada, and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire—Republicans in the upper chamber secured the necessary 60 votes needed to pass a cloture vote that paves the way for a deal critics warn does nothing to save Americans from soaring healthcare premiums unleashed due to the GOP spending bill passed earlier this year and signed into law by President Donald Trump.

“It is thoroughly disappointing that, while most Americans overwhelmingly oppose Republicans’ horrific budget, support the fight to curtail Trump’s authoritarianism, and want to protect healthcare, some Democrats failed to hold the line, and squandered an opportunity to score a popular and decisive win for the American people,” said Lisa Gilbert, co-director of the progressive watchdog group Public Citizen.

The deal will combine three separate funding measures into a single stopgap bill that will reopen the government and keep it funded through the end of January of 2026, but contains no restoration of Medicaid funding, fails to curb Trump rescissions that have devastated government agencies and programs, and does nothing to address Affordable Care Act subsidies other than a “meaningless” promised vote to extend them within 40 days—a vote nearly sure to fail in the Senate and likely not even taken up in the US House, controlled by Republicans.

“What the election showed is that the American people want us to stand up to Trumpism—to his war against working people, to his authoritarianism. That is what people wanted, but tonight that is not what happened.” —Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)

“How absolutely pathetic,” declared the Justice Democrats, an advocacy group that focuses on assisting progressive challengers willing to take on more establishment lawmakers in office. “Your voters expect you to hold the line for their basic healthcare and food benefits. This is just surrender. Every Senate Democrat that joined Republicans to pass this sold the American people out and we should make sure they have no future in public office.”

“Let’s be clear — this proposal isn’t a compromise, it’s a capitulation,” said Rep. Jonathan L. Jackson (D-Ill.). “Millions would lose their health coverage, and millions more would face skyrocketing premiums. The Senate should reject this misguided plan. In the House, my vote will be HELL NO.”

For Gilbert, the shutdown exhibited exactly “how far Republicans will go to demonstrate subservience to their authoritarian leader, even at the expense of the most basic needs of ordinary Americans. Republicans have destroyed affordable healthcare access for millions of Americans, and have allowed the President to weaponize hunger against millions more of our most vulnerable people, all so that they can bully through a budget that’s catapulting us towards a dystopian future of stark inequality.”

While the shutdown may come to an end this week, Gilbert said it remains imperative that “everyone who cares about the well-being of Americans to use all the leverage they have to push back on Trump’s authoritarianism and his cannibalizing of the basic needs of Americans for the benefit of his corporate donors and billionaire friends.”

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who, like Sen. King of Maine, caucuses with the Democrats, called it a “very bad night” as he condemned the eight members of the caucus for making a “very, very bad vote” at a time when the political winds and the moral argument were clearly on the side of holding the line.

“What it does, first of all,” said Sanders in a statement following the vote, “is it raises healthcare premiums for over 20 million Americans by doubling, and in some cases tripling or quadrupling. People can’t afford that when we are already paying the highest prices in the world for healthcare. Number two, it paves the way for 15 million people to be thrown off of Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act,” citing a statistic that indicates over 50,000 people “will die unnecessarily each year” due to lack of adequate healthcare coverage.

“All of that was done,” continued Sanders, “to give a $1 trillion in tax breaks to the top 1%.” In a political context, Sanders noted that last week’s electoral wins in numerous races across the country showed that voters are in the mood to reward lawmakers who stand up to President Donald Trump and his allies in Congress, rather than give in to them.

“What the election showed is that the American people want us to stand up to Trumpism—to his war against working people, to his authoritarianism,” he said. “That is what people wanted, but tonight that is not what happened.”

Democrats in the House, who had backed their Democratic colleagues for holding the line over 40 days in the Senate, fumed over the failure to keep going.

“Americans have endured the pain of the longest government shutdown in history for a ‘deal’ that guarantees nothing on healthcare,” said Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.). “If Republicans wanted to vote to extend subsidies, they would’ve done it already. Capitulating is unacceptable.”

“What Senate Dems who voted for this horseshit deal did was fuck over all the hard work people put in to Tuesday’s elections.” —Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.)

Sen. Chuck Schumer, the Senate Minority Leader, voted “no” on the deal. Still, it’s widely understood he was the driving force behind putting the agreement together and privately supported the eight lawmakers—none of whom are facing reelection in 2026—to cross over.

“Schumer voting ‘no’ for a shutdown deal he facilitated every step of the way,” noted journalist Ken Klippenstein. “Just trying to keep his hands clean. Don’t fall for it.”

In the wake of the vote, others called for Schumer to resign or be primaried for capitulating to deliver practically nothing.

The surrender by Democrats in the Senate facilitated by Schumer, opined journalist Krystal Ball, “perfectly encapsulates why centrists are the problem for the party both substantively and electorally. After romping nationwide victories, the worst members of the Democratic caucus decided to abandon the healthcare fight, which hurts Americans and demobilizes their own base.”


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Hegseth Says 6 More Men Killed in Latest Boat Bombings




Qatari Defense Minister Sheikh Saoud Al Thani Visits The Pentagon

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is seen at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia on October 10, 2025.

 (Photo by John McDonnell/Getty Images)

Six people were killed Sunday in US military strikes on what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth claimed were boats smuggling drugs in the eastern Pacific Ocean, bringing the total death toll from all such reported attacks to at least 76 since early September.

“Yesterday, at the direction of President [Donald] Trump, two lethal kinetic strikes were conducted on two vessels operated by designated terrorist organizations. These vessels were known by our intelligence to be associated with illicit narcotics smuggling, were carrying narcotics, and were transiting along a known narco-trafficking transit route in the eastern Pacific,” Hegseth said Monday on social media without providing evidence to support his claim.

“Both strikes were conducted in international waters and three male narco-terrorists were aboard each vessel. All six were killed,” he added. “No US forces were harmed. Under President Trump, we are protecting the homeland and killing these cartel terrorists who wish to harm our country and its people.”

Sunday’s attacks raised the death toll in the Trump administration’s nine-week campaign to at least 76 people in 19 attacks in the Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea. The US strikes have come amid Trump’s deployment of warships and thousands of troops off the coast of Venezuela and follow the president’s approval of covert CIA action and threats to attack inside the oil-rich country.

Last week, Republicans in the US Senate rejected a bipartisan war powers resolution aimed at stopping the Trump administration from continuing its bombing of alleged drug boats or attacking Venezuela without lawmakers’ assent, as required by law.

Trump administration officials have admitted that they aren’t attempting to identify people aboard boats before or after bombing them. Congresswoman Sara Jacobs (D-Calif.) recently told CNN that Pentagon officials briefed her “that they do not need to positively identify individuals on the vessel to do the strikes.”

Jacobs also said that the administration is not making any effort to imprison survivors of the strikes or prosecute them, “because they could not satisfy the evidentiary burden.”

In the past, drug trafficking in the Caribbean and Pacific has been treated by the US government as a law enforcement issue, with the Coast Guard and other agencies sometimes intercepting boats and arresting those on board if evidence was found, granting them a day in court.

Leaders in Venezuela, Colombia, and other nations; United Nations officials; human rights groups; and Democratic US lawmakers are among those who have condemned the boat bombings as extrajudicial assassination, murder, and war crimes.

While some residents of the Venezuelan villages from which the targeted boats departed have said that many of the men killed in the strikes were running drugs, regional officials and relatives of victims have asserted that numerous men slain in the attacks were not narco-traffickers.

According to an MSNBC investigation published last week, the identities of up to 50 strike victims remain publicly unknown. In a rare display of congressional bipartisanship, Reps. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), Mike Turner (R-Ohio), Seth Moulton (D-Mass.), and Jason Crow (D-Col.) last week sent a letter to Trump seeking clarification on the administration’s legal reasoning for the strikes and asking, “What evidence confirms that those killed were cartel operatives, rather than coerced, deceived, or trafficked civilians?”

“We strongly support the effort to reduce the flow of narcotics into this country,” the lawmakers wrote. “This effort, like every action the United States military takes, must be done within the legal, moral, and ethical framework that sets us apart from our adversaries.”


Endorsing Peggy Flanagan in Minnesota, Sanders Expands Push for 'Fighters' for Working Class in Senate



Endorsing Peggy Flanagan in Minnesota, Sanders Expands Push for 'Fighters' for Working Class in Senate

Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan speaks to people attending the Minnesota DemocraticFarmerLabor Party (DFL) election watch party in Saint Paul, Minnesota on November 05, 2024. 

(Photo by Christopher Mark Juhn/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Calling for more Democratic lawmakers who have “the guts to stand up for working people,” Sen. Bernie Sanders weighed in on another US Senate primary on Monday, hours after a handful of Democrats agreed to reopen the federal government without Republican concessions on healthcare.

Sanders (I-Vt.), who earlier this year announced his support for Democratic Senate candidates Graham Platner in Maine and Abdul El-Sayed in Michigan, has now formally endorsed Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan’s candidacy for the US Senate.

In his endorsement, Sanders said that the Senate needs lawmakers who will stand up “against the billionaires and the corporate interests,” and argued that Flanagan understands the needs of working-class people personally due in part to her own blue-collar background.

“Peggy knows what it is to struggle,” he said. “She was raised by a hard-working single mother who needed [the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program] to help put food on the table and Medicaid for healthcare. And she’s dedicated her career to fighting for working families.”

Sanders also hailed Flanagan’s accomplishments as both lieutenant governor and Minnesota state legislator, and he said she would work to fight for progressive priorities on a national level.

“Peggy fought to raise the minimum wage and she got it done,” he said. “She fought for paid family leave and she got it done. We need fighters who are from the working class and for the working class here in the Senate. Peggy will fight for Medicare for All, to raise the minimum wage to a living wage, and to address the crises we face in childcare, education, and housing.”

Sanders concluded his endorsement by arguing that “we don’t need more corporate Democrats in the Senate. We need Peggy Flanagan, who’ll fight for working people.”

Progressive political consultant Rebecca Katz hailed Sanders’ endorsements of Flanagan, Platner, and El-Sayed, whom she described on X as “three good candidates who understand the stakes and know how to fight back.”

Flanagan is running to replace retiring Sen. Tina Smith (D-Minn.), who has been serving in the Senate ever since former Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) resigned in 2018. Flanagan will be facing off against Rep. Angie Craig (D-Minn), a centrist Democrat who has several endorsements from the Democratic establishment, including House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).

According to Minnesota Reformer, Flanagan has also scored endorsements from Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Ed Markey (D-Mass.), who both stumped for her at the Minnesota State Fair this past summer.


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I acknowledge not being a deficit hawk, but I suspect most of the politicians in Washington are, and certainly anyone who thinks we need to be paying down the debt should be screaming bloody murder.

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Chuck Schumer at Shutdown Presser

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks at a press conference following recent elections as the government shutdown continues in Washington, DC on November 5, 2025.

 (Photo by Nathan Posner/Anadolu via Getty Images)



The Planet Wreckers Are Holding the World Back; We Must Call Them Out at COP30

Oil Boom in Texas's Permian Basin

Workers extract oil from oil wells in the Permian Basin in Midland, Texas on May 3, 2018. 

(Photo by Benjamin Lowy/Getty Images)

Leaders have a choice: continue shielding fossil fuel interests, or stand with the majority of the world demanding a fast, fair, and funded transition away from oil, gas, and coal.

By Romain Ioualalen

As world leaders gather in Belém for COP30, the stakes could not be higher.

Ten years after the Paris Agreement, despite the progress made the world has reached a breaking point. We’ve temporarily breached 1.5°C of warming, climate impacts are accelerating faster than even scientists feared, and people, especially in the Global South, are suffering the consequences. The past year has brought record-breaking heat, deadly floods, and wildfires from California to the Amazon. But despite the mounting evidence, the fossil fuel industry and a handful of rich countries continue to pour fuel on the fire.

According to our new analysis Planet Wreckers: Global North Countries Fueling the Fire Since the Paris Agreement, just four Global North countries—the United States, Canada, Australia, and Norway—are responsible for nearly all of the global increase in oil and gas production since the Paris Agreement. While the rest of the world combined has reduced production by 2%, these four countries have increased theirs by almost 40%. The US alone accounts for over 90% of that increase, making it the undisputed Planet-Wrecker-in-Chief.

These rich countries undermine the commitments made at COP28, when the world agreed to transition away from fossil fuels. Instead of leading the phaseout, they are leading the expansion: approving new oil fields, subsidizing fossil fuel companies, and blocking fair global finance rules that could help the Global South transition to clean energy.

The fossil fuel era is ending. The only question is whether it ends fast enough, and fair enough, to give us a livable future.

It’s immoral and arguably criminal. Keeping the 1.5°C limit in reach requires ending fossil fuel expansion and rapidly phasing out oil, gas, and coal production and use. The legal case for this has also been recently bolstered by international courts, including the International Court of Justice. Every new well drilled in TexasAlberta, or the North Sea is a violation of international law and a betrayal of climate justice.

Meanwhile, the same countries hoard wealth while delivering pennies in climate finance. Since 2015, all Global North governments have provided only $280 billion in public climate finance, a fraction of what’s needed, and five times less than the $1.3 trillion in profits their oil and gas corporations made in the same period. The money to fund a just transition exists, but it’s in the wrong hands.

At COP30, leaders have a choice: continue shielding fossil fuel interests, or stand with the majority of the world demanding a fast, fair, and funded transition away from oil, gas, and coal, and lead on phasing out first and fastest as their historical responsibility demands.

That transition has already begun. From the first global conference on fossil fuel phaseout announced by Colombia, to countries in AfricaAsia, and Latin America developing people-centered renewable energy pathways, momentum is building. The question now is whether the biggest polluters will step up or be remembered as the governments that chose profit over survival.

Belém must be the moment when leaders stop hiding behind greenwashing and false solutions. That means rejecting carbon offsets and “net zero” distractions; kicking fossil fuel lobbyists out of the talks; and putting justice, workers, and public finance at the center of the just transition. It also means solidarity with people fighting fossil-fueled violence, from Gaza to the Niger Delta, and demanding accountability for those who profit from destruction.

The fossil fuel era is ending. The only question is whether it ends fast enough, and fair enough, to give us a livable future.

If the United States, Canada, Australia, and Norway continue to block progress, they will not only be remembered as the Planet Wreckers, they will be held accountable, by people, by history, and by the law.




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