On Easter Sunday, Pope Francis performed his final public
act when he waved to worshippers in St. Peter’s Square. He died today at
88. Born in Argentina, he was the first Pope to come from the Americas. He was
also the first Jesuit to serve as Pope, bringing new perspectives to the
Catholic Church and hoping to focus the church on the poor.
The stock market plunged again today after Donald J. Trump continued to harass Federal Reserve chair Jerome
Powell. The threat of instability if Trump tries to fire Powell, added to the
instability already created by Trump’s tariff policies, saw the Dow Jones
Industrial Average fell 971.82 points, or 2.48%; the S&P 500 dropped 2.36%,
and the Nasdaq Composite fell 2.55%. The dollar hit a three-year low, while the
value of gold soared. Journalist Brian Tyler Cohen noted that since Trump took
office, the Dow has fallen 13.8%, the S&P 500 is down 15.5%, and the Nasdaq
is down 20.5%.
Hannah Erin Lang of the Wall Street Journal reported
that “[t]he Trump rout is taking on historic dimensions.” She noted that the
Dow Jones Industrial Average “is headed for its worst April performance since
1932,” when the country was in the midst of the Great Depression. Scott Ladner,
chief investment officer at Horizon Investments, told Lang: “It’s impossible to
commit capital to an economy that is unstable and unknowable because of policy
structure.”
The Trump administration announced on April 11 that it would
withhold from Harvard University $2.2 billion in grants already awarded and a
$60 million contract unless Harvard permitted the federal government to control
the university’s admissions and intellectual content. Today, Harvard sued
the government for violating the First Amendment and overstepping its legal
authority under the guise of addressing antisemitism.
The complaint notes the “arbitrary and capricious nature” of
the government’s demands, and says, “The government has not—and cannot—identify
any rational connection between antisemitism concerns and the medical,
scientific, technological, and other research it has frozen that aims to save
American lives, foster American success, preserve American security, and
maintain America’s position as a global leader in innovation.”
University president Alan Garber explained that the freeze
would jeopardize research on “how cancer spreads throughout the body, to
predict the spread of infectious disease outbreaks, and to ease the pain of
soldiers wounded on the battlefield.”
He continued: “As opportunities to reduce the risk of
multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease are on the
horizon, the government is slamming on the brakes. The victims will be future
patients and their loved ones who will suffer the heartbreak of illnesses that
might have been prevented or treated more effectively. Indiscriminately
slashing medical, scientific, and technological research undermines the
nation’s ability to save American lives, foster American success, and maintain
America’s position as a global leader in innovation.”
Harvard is suing the departments of Health and Human
Services, Justice, Education, Energy, and Defense, the General Services
Administration (GSA), the National Institutes of Health, National Science
Foundation, NASA, and the leaders of those agencies.
After news broke yesterday that Defense Secretary
Pete Hegseth had disclosed classified information on a second unsecure Signal
chat—this one on his unsecure personal cell phone—and his former
spokesperson told Politico the Pentagon was in “total chaos,”
and he fired three of his top aides, media articles today wrote that
officials were looking for a new Secretary of Defense.
But Hegseth blamed the media for the exposure of his Signal
chats, and Trump stood by Hegseth. According to Dasha Burns, Eli Stokols, and
Jake Traylor of Politico, the president doesn’t want to validate
the stories about disarray at the Pentagon by firing Hegseth. “He’s doing a
great job,” the president told reporters. “It’s just fake news.”
While the visible side of the administration appears to be
floundering, new stories suggest that the less visible side—the “Department of
Government Efficiency”—has dug into U.S. data in alarming ways.
On April 15, Jenna McLaughlin of NPR reported on an official whistleblower disclosure that as soon as members of the “Department of Government Efficiency” (DOGE) arrived at the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), they appeared to be hacking into secure data. While they claimed to be looking for places to cut costs, the behavior of the DOGE team suggested something else was going on.
They demanded the highest level of access, tried
to hide their activities in the system, turned off monitoring tools, and then
manually deleted the record of their tracks, all behaviors that cybersecurity
experts told McLaughlin sounded like “what criminal or state-sponsored hackers
might do.”
Staffers noticed that an IP address in Russia was trying to log in to the system using a newly created DOGE account with correct username and password and later saw that a large amount of sensitive data was leaving the agency. Cybersecurity experts identified that spike as a sign of a breach in the system, creating the potential for that data to be sold, stolen, or used to hurt companies, while the head of DOGE himself could use the information for his own businesses.
“All of this is alarming," Russ Handorf, who worked in
cybersecurity for the FBI, told McLaughlin. "If this was a publicly traded
company, I would have to report this [breach] to the Securities and Exchange
Commission.” When the whistleblower brought his concerns to someone at NLRB, he
received threats.
“If he didn’t know the backstory, any [chief information
security officer] worth his salt would look at network activity like this and
assume it’s a nation-state attack from China or Russia,” Jake Braun, former
acting principal deputy national cyber director at the White House, told
McLaughlin.
McLaughlin noted that the story of what happened at the NLRB
is not uncommon. When challenged by judges, DOGE has offered conflicting and
vague answers to the question of why it needs access to sensitive information and has dismissed concerns about cybersecurity and privacy. The administration
has slashed through the agencies that protect systems from attack and Trump has
signed an executive order urging government departments to
“eliminate…information silos” and to share their information.
Sharon Block, the executive director of Harvard Law School's
Center for Labor and a Just Economy and a former NLRB board member, told
McLaughlin: “There is nothing that I can see about what DOGE is doing that
follows any of the standard procedures for how you do an audit that has
integrity and that's meaningful and will actually produce results that serve
the normal auditing function, which is to look for fraud, waste and abuse…. The
mismatch between what they're doing and the established, professional way to do
what they say they're doing...that just kind of gives away the store, that they
are not actually about finding more efficient ways for the government to
operate.”
On April 18, Makena Kelly and Vittoria Elliott of Wired reported
that DOGE is building a master database that knits together information from
U.S. Customs and Immigration Services, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the
Social Security Administration, and voting data from Pennsylvania and Florida.
This appears to be designed to find and pressure undocumented immigrants, Kelly
and Elliott reported, but the effects of the consolidation of data are not
limited to them.
On April 15 the top Democrat on the House
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Gerald Connolly of Virginia,
asked the acting inspector general at the Department of Labor and the inspector
general at the NLRB to investigate “any and all attempts to exfiltrate data and
any attempts to cover up their activities.” Two days later, he made a similar
request to the acting inspector general for the Social Security Administration.
Connolly wrote: “I am concerned that DOGE is moving personal
information across agencies without the notification required under the Privacy
Act or related laws, such that the American people are wholly unaware their
data is being manipulated in this way.”
On April 17, Christopher Bing and Avi Asher-Schapiro
of ProPublica reported that the administration is looking to
replace the federal government’s $700 billion internal expense card program,
known as SmartPay, with a contract awarded to the private company Ramp. Ramp is
backed by investment firms tied to Trump and Musk.
While administration officials insist that SmartPay is
wasteful, both Republican and Democratic budget experts say that’s wrong,
according to Bing and Asher-Schapiro. “SmartPay is the lifeblood of the
government,” former General Services Administration commissioner Sonny Hashmi
told the reporters. “It’s a well-run program that solves real world
problems…with exceptional levels of oversight and fraud prevention already
baked in.”
“There’s a lot of money to be made by a new company coming
in here,” said Hashmi. “But you have to ask: What is the problem that’s being
solved?”
—Heather Cox Richardson
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