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Podcast Trump rebuked at every turn; Courts and Congress show new spine as Americans take to the streets

The Rachel Maddow Show · 44:08 · 91d ago

Queued Transcribing Analyzing Complete
50% Moderate Human

"As a known partisan commentary show, be aware that the selective roundup of anti-Trump developments uses moral outrage to reinforce opposition without presenting counterarguments."

MildModerateSevere

Transparency

Transparent

Primary Technique

Moral outrage

Provoking a sense that something is deeply unfair or wrong, activating a feeling that demands action — sharing, protesting, punishing — before you've fully evaluated the situation. It's one of the most viral emotions online because it combines anger with righteousness.

Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory (2004); Brady et al. (2017, PNAS)

The episode recaps multiple federal court blocks on Trump administration actions like funding cuts to blue states and retaliatory grant cancellations, Republican defections in Congress against Trump's policies, and chaotic ICE raids in Minneapolis prompting community resistance. No significant covert mechanism; the partisan framing and moral outrage are overt for this established opinion show, where the audience expects progressive advocacy. Standard podcast ads and promotions are transparently disclosed.

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Provenance Signals

The transcript exhibits highly natural, idiosyncratic speech patterns and a sophisticated narrative structure characteristic of Rachel Maddow's established broadcasting style. There are no signs of synthetic pacing or the formulaic, repetitive structures typical of AI-generated news scripts.

Natural Speech Patterns Use of conversational fillers and rhetorical devices like 'just hear me out', 'stick with me', and 'flock of ducks level insane quackery'.
Personal Voice and Style The transcript reflects Rachel Maddow's distinct narrative style, including her signature 'A leads to B' storytelling structure and specific vocabulary.
Contextual Awareness The content references specific, complex legal rulings and political nuances that align with professional journalism rather than generic AI summaries.
Episode Description
Rachel Maddow rounds up a litany of recent court losses Donald Trump has suffered, as even some Republicans in Congress are agreeing to block or otherwise mitigate the damage Trump's policies are inflicting on their constituents, all while Americans rally in protest of abuses and outright crimes committed by Trump's ICE agents.Rachel Maddow reviews recent examples of ICE agents overstepping their legal authority and making a chaotic mess of the job they're meant to be doing, all of which paints them not as actual professional immigration enforcement, but as Trump's untrained secret police force dressed up in military gear.ICE agents dressed in paramilitary costume and terrorizing communities with heavy-handed tactics appear to have thought their abuses would earn them respect and obedience. On the contrary, Americans are only becoming more agitated and inclined to resist ICE's overstepping. Amanda Otero, co-executive director of Take Action Minnesota, talks with Rachel Maddow about organizing anti-ICE protests and other activism as Donald Trump surges troops of border patrol agents into her town. Want more of Rachel? Check out the "Rachel Maddow Presents" feed to listen to all of her chart-topping original podcasts.To listen to all of your favorite MS podcasts without ads, sign up for MS NOW Premium on Apple Podcasts. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Worth Noting

Offers a concise timeline of specific recent court rulings (e.g., blocking energy funding cuts to blue states, offshore wind farm shutdown) and congressional votes (e.g., science budget restorations) for tracking Trump administration legal pushback.

Be Aware

Moral outrage framing that makes opposition to Trump feel like moral clarity while excluding alternative perspectives.

Influence Dimensions

How are these scored?
Repeated emphasis on Trump's 'blatant' law-breaking and ICE 'terrorizing' communities (e.g., door-ramming, tear gas on citizens) builds righteous anger that matches the reported events but amplifies them emotionally throughout the episode.

Moral outrage

Provoking a sense that something is deeply unfair or wrong, activating a feeling that demands action — sharing, protesting, punishing — before you've fully evaluated the situation. It's one of the most viral emotions online because it combines anger with righteousness.

Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory (2004); Brady et al. (2017, PNAS)

Intensity amplification

Inflating the importance, drama, or shock value of information using superlatives, alarming framing, and emotional language. Once your alarm system activates, you stop evaluating proportionality.

Cultivation theory (Gerbner, 1969); availability heuristic (Tversky & Kahneman, 1973)

Presents a litany of Trump losses in courts/Congress/protests as a unified 'rebuke' narrative → systematically excludes any Trump successes, defenses, or contextual justifications → serves the show's progressive audience by constructing a worldview of institutional resistance.

Single-cause framing

Attributing a complex outcome to a single cause, ignoring the web of contributing factors. A clean explanation is more satisfying and easier to act on than a complicated one. Especially effective when the proposed cause is something you already dislike.

Fallacy of the single cause; Kahneman's WYSIATI principle

In-group/Out-group framing

Leveraging your tendency to automatically trust information from "our people" and distrust outsiders. Once groups are established, people apply different standards of evidence depending on who is speaking.

Social Identity Theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979); Cialdini's Unity principle (2016)

ICE portrayed as 'Trump's untrained secret police force dressed up in military gear' terrorizing citizens → flattens agents into abusive outgroup → bolsters narrative of chaotic overreach to justify protests.

Character flattening

Reducing a complex person to one defining trait — hero, villain, genius, fool — stripping away nuance that would complicate the narrative. Once someone is labeled, everything they do gets interpreted through that lens.

Fundamental attribution error (Ross, 1977); Propp's narrative archetypes (1928)

Us vs. Them

Dividing the world into two camps — people like us (good, trustworthy) and people not like us (dangerous, wrong). It exploits a deep human tendency to favor our own group. Once you accept the division, information from "them" gets automatically discounted.

Tajfel's Social Identity Theory (1979); Minimal Group Paradigm

About this analysis

Knowing about these techniques makes them visible, not powerless. The ones that work best on you are the ones that match beliefs you already hold.

This analysis is a tool for your own thinking — what you do with it is up to you.

Analyzed: 16d ago
Transcript

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Now, I'm not going to start here tonight where you think I might be starting, but just hear me out. Stick with me. You will see where this is going in good time. All right. Today, amid just the blitz of headlines on what has been a gigantic news day following a gigantic news week, you might not have noticed the news today. You might not have seen the headline today that today a federal court blocked the Trump administration from cutting energy funding just for blue states. This is billions of dollars Congress appropriated for clean energy projects of various kinds all over the country. Trump administration decided and they admitted this. They decided that just in blue states, just in states that didn't vote for Trump, they would cut all of that funding. They'd leave the funding in place in states that voted for Trump. they would cut it in states that didn't vote for Trump. A federal court today ruled that that is illegal and stopped the Trump administration from doing that. That ruling today came after another federal court today stopped Trump from shutting down a big offshore wind farm in Rhode Island and Connecticut. Trump's shutdown of that project, according to the courts today, was also illegal. And so yet another federal court blocked Trump on that as well. So that work on the wind farm will be able to go ahead. Both of those rulings today follow last night. Yet another federal court blocking Trump, this time from cutting funding to the American Academy of Pediatrics. This is a doctor's group, a pediatrician's group that criticized the flock of ducks level insane quackery at Trump's Department of Health and Human Services under RFK Jr. Trump responded by canceling federal grants for the American Academy of Pediatrics. A judge has now ruled that that was illegal retaliation. And so Trump is blocked from doing that. That funding has to be reinstated. That ruling comes after another federal judge just blocked Trump from cutting off federal election funds to states in retaliation for them not changing their election rules in ways that Trump wants. The judge said, quote, the Constitution assigns no authority to the president over federal election administration. And so Trump got black got blocked on that one, too. Shall I keep going? I could keep going. Another federal court just blocked Trump from freezing billions of dollars for child care and social services for kids. Again, in Democratic run states as some kind of punishment against those states for electing Democrats, punishing them for that by cutting off the temporary assistance to needy families program. Because, you know, you know, what would Jesus do? Trump was also just blocked from a from doing that by by yet another federal court. It's almost like he is losing all the time and everywhere now. There may still be people in America who are shocked that Trump keeps breaking the law over and over again, blatantly and insistently. The courts no longer appeared to be shocked by that. And the courts now are just telling him no, very bluntly, every single day and often multiple times a day. And it's not even just the courts. As I know you are aware, last week in one 48-hour stretch, we had a Senate vote for a war powers resolution to block Trump from any further military adventurism in Venezuela. Five Republican senators crossed over to side with Democrats to pass that war powers resolution. It was enough to advance that. It's going to get another vote in the Senate this week. That came right on the heels of 17 Republicans in the House breaking ranks with Trump and siding with Democrats on the Affordable Care Act to try to at least temporarily undo the disastrous decision Trump and Republicans made in their so-called Big Beautiful Bill, the decision to send tens of thousands of American families' health insurance rates through the roof. Seventeen Republicans crossed over, defied Trump and joined with Democrats to pass that health care matter in the House. Now it's going to come to the Senate. Trump is now whining about how he might have to veto it if and when it passes in the Senate as well, because he definitely wants to make sure that people's health insurance premiums double or triple in cost for nothing other than something that he personally did. He apparently wants that. I mean, what we've just seen in Congress is one of the worst rebukes Trump has had from congressional Republicans since he has been back in office this whole disastrous year. And I got to tell you, this didn't get as much attention as it should. But right on the heels of that biggest rebuke that Trump has had in Congress, those series of decisions, both in the House and the Senate, Republicans crossing over to join with Democrats to rebuke Trump on multiple policy issues. Right on the heels of the Senate giving Trump a one finger salute on Venezuela and the House giving him a one finger salute on what he did to people's health insurance. This did not get enough attention, but did you see this? Look, headline. Congress is rejecting Trump's steep budget cuts to science. Lead. Congress is racing to undo thousands of cuts to federal science programs that President Trump called for last year. Trump is trying to cut the National Science Foundation 56%. Congress is now saying they will cut it less than 1%. 31%. Trump wanted to slash NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, you know, the weather. Congress's budget for NOAA is no cuts to NOAA, flat funding for NOAA. Trump wants to cut basic research, which has been the lifeblood of American technological innovation since World War II. Trump wants to cut basic research, more than 33%. Congress instead is bumping up their budget, bumping up the budget for basic research by more than 2%. Trump is demanding all these cuts to science, and Congress is saying no, and this is a bipartisan thing. This started in the Senate as a bipartisan agreement. Last week, the House voted for it as well. I know it's like muscle memory to assume, A, that Congress does nothing, and B, if they ever defy that rule and do something, it's always something bad. But that is changing a little bit here. And it's changing all against Trump. And Republicans in the House are down to such a slim margin there now that if every Democrat is present at the moment, Republicans can only afford one defection on any given vote. They can only give up one Republican vote in the House and still pass the things that their leadership supports. And they know they're going to get walloped in the midterms. And with moderate Democrat Mary Paltola announcing today that she's going to run against the unpopular Republican Alaska Senator Dan Sullivan, that means that Democrats are getting pretty close to a shot at taking over the Senate in the midterms as well. They've got a shot at taking over the Senate in addition to the near certainty that they will take over the House. We've got the courts pushing back harder and harder and now apparently losing that sense of shock they had that the administration really is just blatantly breaking the law all the time. The courts are finally getting it and pushing back and seeming to understand what it is they're up against. We've got the Congress, believe it or not, in some ways pushing back while simultaneously Republicans are losing any hope of hanging on to power in Congress. It looks like the Democrats will be taking over. Today, Democratic U.S. Senator Mark Kelly brought a new kind of fight against the Trump administration. He brought a high-powered lawsuit against Trump and against Pete Hegseth and the rando art collector fundraiser guy who Trump inexplicably named to be Navy secretary. Trump, Senator Kelly is suing to block their efforts to reduce him in rank and dock his retirement pay for the grave crime of saying out loud the true statement that U.S. service members are supposed to disobey illegal orders. He's now suing them for that. Speaking of suing the Trump administration, the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois and the state of Minnesota and the cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis have all brought major lawsuits tonight against the Trump administration to try to stop the attack by Trump's federal agents on those states and those cities. Trump's attack on Minneapolis in particular has been absolutely chaotic and bizarre and totally incoherent, even more so in the wake of the killing of Renee Nicole Good last week by an ICE officer who last week shot her three times through her windshield and her open driver's side window. I mean, it's just been nuts in Minneapolis. In this one, Minneapolis home, these totally out of control, heavily armed officers broke down the door and rammed their way inside as the homeowner demanded to see a warrant allowing them to enter. The Associated Press reporting tonight that those agents didn't have a warrant from a judge authorizing their forced entry into a private residence, but they just did it anyway, into a home with kids inside, apparently completely disregarding any applicable law. So this was today in Minneapolis as well. A man named Christian Molina, a U.S. citizen, was driving south on 36th Street in South Minneapolis. He says he inadvertently made eye contact with an ICE officer who was lurking in an alley watching cars go by. The ICE agent then chased him and literally rammed his car into Mr. Molina. rammed his car into Mr. Molina's vehicle, into the rear driver's side of his car, and then demanded that Mr. Molina show his papers. Mr. Molina is a U.S. citizen. According to the Minneapolis Star Tribune tonight, quote, as agents confronted Christian Molina, dozens of community members came outside to disrupt them. The people who responded to that scene included a Minneapolis City Council member who told the paper that after Mr. Molina told the agents he knew his rights and that this was an illegal stop and he didn't need to show them anything. And after all those people poured into the street to support this guy, the agents, I kid you not, what did they do? They set off two tear gas canisters in the street and then ran away. That was their contribution to public order and safety in South Minneapolis today. Here's another standoff from this weekend. A woman in Minneapolis ordered DoorDash and ICE apparently chased the woman doing the delivery for DoorDash chased her into the customer home where she was dropping off the food because she works for DoorDash The homeowner in a fit of righteous rage absolutely stood her ground and told ICE that they were not coming into her home to get this woman that they needed a warrant to do it, and if they didn't have that warrant, she was not letting them in. And she called the cops on them, and she called her neighbors, and her neighbors came out, and everybody was standing there blowing whistles and yelling at them. And eventually they left and they drove away without the freaking door dash driver who they were trying to pursue like she was Osama bin Laden into the caves. Right. They fled. They left. They drove away after terrorizing everyone in that home and on that block. Even today, an hour outside Minneapolis, in St. Cloud, Trump's agents, dozens of them, tried to muster some kind of military-style show of force at a mini-mall parking lot in St. Cloud, Minnesota. They were soon surrounded by hundreds of local residents telling them to get out. They were so overwhelmed with the way the neighborhood responded, Trump's agents got stuck there in the mini-mall parking lot. A Democratic state senator had to intervene to ask the crowd to please let the federal agents leave because they otherwise couldn't. Finally, after about an hour, people allowed these tough guy masked agents to turntail and leave with their tails between their legs. This is how they're conducting themselves. They would appear to have absolutely no clue what they are doing. This is not what professional immigration law enforcement looks like. What this looks like is military style weapons and gear given to masked, unbadged secret police who appear to have learned their tactics by playing video games about real wars and fantasizing about being scary to women. And if they think by what they're doing, they are attracting people to their cause. Or intimidating people into not turning out to protest against them or into not turning out to watch what they're doing, to record what they're doing. Well, they are very seriously wrong about that. I mean, this is also today in Minneapolis. Local school kids in Minneapolis en masse walking out of their school to tell Trump's federal agents to leave them alone and get out of their town. Tonight, we're going to talk about what Minnesotans are doing to try to protect their schools, forming human chains around Minnesota public schools at pick up and drop off. The Wall Street Journal reporting this weekend on a surge in, quote, volunteers, many of them moms already involved in their schools, using Google Docs to divvy up tasks such as delivering groceries to immigrant families. Volunteers are on hand at drop off and pick up at schools with whistles to blow in case ICE agents show up. The Immigrant Defense Network telling The Washington Post that they have trained about 2000 people total to be ICE observers in the Twin Cities. about 2,000 people total. But then the day after ICE killed Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, they got a huge surge. They had 354 people show up in one day, the very next day, to be trained to be ICE observers. 354 people showed up in one day. Here today is Minneapolis's mayor, Jacob Fry, flanked by the state attorney general and other state leaders talking about their big new lawsuit against the Trump administration. And the mayor saying, quote, Donald Trump should know that as long as federal agents are in our city acting unconstitutionally against our neighbors, we will continue to push back with everything we've got. Here are Democratic members of Congress turning up at the local ICE detention facility, the local ICE jail in Minnesota, demanding to be let in because as members of Congress, they are allowed by law to inspect any federal facility like that at any time with no notice. But these members of Congress were nevertheless turned away. Today, Democracy Forward went to court to force ICE and force the Trump administration to let those members of Congress in because that, in fact, is the law. And again, if they were hoping that their shambolic and chaotic violence would dissuade Americans from standing up to them. Well, they do not understand Americans. They do not understand how we are wired. It is having the opposite effect. These were some of the huge protests this weekend against ICE and Trump in Minneapolis. And it wasn't just in Minneapolis. It was literally everywhere over these last few days. This was downtown Colorado Springs, Colorado, where Renee Nicole Good is originally from. This was a big protest this weekend in New York City against ICE and against Trump. and it wasn't just big cities like Minneapolis or even New York City. This was Clayton, Missouri this weekend. Clayton, Missouri. This was Memphis, Tennessee this weekend. This was Washington, D.C. this weekend, including protests outside the White House. And hold that thought because there's something else that's going to be happening in Washington, D.C. tomorrow that you're going to want to know about. We'll have more on that in a moment. This was Boston this weekend. Really big crowd in Boston protesting against Trump and against ICE. This was Carson City, Nevada this weekend. This was a protest this weekend in Huntington Beach, California, a famously MAGA city in Southern California. People out this weekend, they're protesting against Trump and against ICE. This was a really big protest this weekend in Texas, San Antonio, Texas. This weekend, there were big protests in Houston and in Dallas and in Fort Worth, but a big one in San Antonio. This was South Elgin, Illinois. This was Providence, Rhode Island this weekend. Last week, we told you about locals in Roxbury, New Jersey, protesting furiously and repeatedly against plans to build a new ice facility in Roxbury, New Jersey. They protested this weekend against ICE and Trump. We're told that Roxbury is considering a resolution on that proposed ICE facility tomorrow. The mayor is expected to speak on it. This was Fairbanks, Alaska protests against Trump and ICE. The temperature at this protest in Fairbanks was minus 25 degrees. And look at people turning out to protest against ICE and the Trump administration. I have to tell you, I'm only scratching the surface here. Usually when we have this many protests to cover all over the country, it's because there's been some long planned thing where people had weeks of notice, right, for some, you know, upcoming next big protest. That was true with the first No Kings Day and the second No Kings Day. Also, the big hands-off protests that happened last spring. People had weeks of notice for those. There was lots of national organizing around them. People had a chance to get ready and make their plans. What happened these last few days was not that. This was essentially spontaneous, a spontaneous reaction to the killing of Renee Nicole Good. And it happened everywhere. Well over a thousand protests taking place over these last few days in every state in the country. And some of them, yes, were loosely organized under the same banner under the name Ice Out for Good, honoring Renee Good. But again, this was not a big, long lead time national organizing thing. This was spontaneous and instinctual everywhere. And so today's one of those road days when I can actually show you the protests, not by just me individually giving you like first person coverage of every protest by people who were in them, I can actually today show you media coverage and headlines about the protests. Because every news outlet in the country covered these protests over the past few days. They were big. They were instant. They were instinctual. They were spontaneous. They were self-explanatory. They happened for a clear and obvious reason that everybody in the country instantly and instinctually understands. And so every paper in the country, every news source in the country had headlines like this. The Associated Press, anti-ice protesters assemble across U.S. after shootings in Minneapolis and Portland. USA Today, thousands march in Minneapolis and elsewhere to protest ICE. New York Times, anti-ice protests spread nationwide. CNN, anti-ice protests held across U.S. after agents' fatal shooting of a woman in Minneapolis. NPR, nationwide anti-ice protests call for accountability after Renee Good's death. Daily Beast, anti-ice protesters flood 500 cities days after Minneapolis killing. The Guardian newspaper in London, U.S. protests condemn ice killing of Renee Good and, quote, a regime that is willing to kill its own citizens. Looking around the country, you see this everywhere. Salt Lake Tribune, ice out for good protests unfold in Salt Lake City and other Utah cities after Minneapolis killing. WFAA in Fort Worth, Texas. Hundreds gather in Fort Worth for Ice Out for Good protest. In Nebraska, KETV, Ice Out for Good protest draws protesters to central Omaha, Nebraska. KSHB in Missouri, a thousand demonstrators attend vigil and protest against ice in Kansas City. Spot on Alabama, locals protest ice shooting of Minneapolis women outside Huntsville, Alabama City Hall. In South Carolina, WACH, protesters at South Carolina Statehouse demand justice for Renee Good shot by ICE. In Kentucky, WLKY, hundreds gather in Louisville to protest after ICE agent fatally shoots women in Minnesota. Calo News or Calo News in Arizona, quote, she was assassinated. Tucson residents pour out in protest after ICE kills Minnesota woman. The Bonner County Daily Bee in Idaho. Over 200 attend Sandpoint, Idaho. Ice out for good protest. WSYX in Columbus, Ohio. Killing our own citizens. Ohio protesters call for ICE to leave, outraged by shootings. WTXL in Tallahassee, Florida. Protest and vigil at Florida State Capitol after deadly ICE confrontation in Minnesota. I mean, all over the country. Wichita, Kansas, Charleston, West Virginia, East Cobb, Georgia, Rapid City, South Dakota, everywhere. The American people are reacting instinctively to what Trump is doing to us now. The American people are using their small d democratic muscle memory to respond reflexively to what is happening, to use our right of free speech, our right to freedom of assembly, to use it, to say no. And from this point that we're in this place of profound weakness for this historically unpopular president, no president at this point in his second term has had approval ratings this low other than Richard Nixon. And at this point in Richard Nixon's second term, he was less than a year away from resigning. From this point of profound weakness and unpopularity for this president, fueled by near universal moral revulsion at what he is doing to the American people. Something that he apparently thinks he should respond to by becoming more extreme and more violent and more morally repulsive, thus radicalizing more and more American citizens against him every day from this point of profound weakness and political malpractice. Now he has decided to take a wild swing at the American economy and the U.S. dollar by threatening the chair of the Federal Reserve with criminal prosecution. Fed Chair Jerome Powell responded last night in an I will not be intimidated video statement Multiple Republican senators have responded with their own moral and political revulsion saying not only that they're against what Trump is doing and they're supporting Jerome Powell, but crucially, if this is how Trump is going to use the U.S. Justice Department, then maybe it's the U.S. Justice Department that needs to be investigated by Congress. It's Republican senators saying that. The Republican chairman of the House Financial Services Committee is condemning this Jeremiah against Jerome Powell as well. The rabidly right wing Wall Street Journal editorial board is out tonight with an editorial calling this a, quote, self-defeating fiasco and a self-defeating scheme that should result in the, quote, firing of those responsible before they can be the cause of, quote, any more embarrassment. And, you know, economically, maybe you voted for the Republicans because you thought, oh, Republicans good with money. Trump has brought job growth in this country down to a 16 year low. Trump has dragged factory activity and manufacturing levels back to the Stone Age. At the micro level of individual American families finances, Trump's policies, not random extra external factors, but Trump's specific and deliberate policies have created deliberate manmade financial harm on health insurance costs, which he apparently accidentally exploded on electricity costs, which he apparently accidentally exploded. And now for millions of Americans, he's going to be garnishing their wages for their student loans, too. Again, none of these are externalities. None of these are economic factors that are imposing on his presidency. These are all policies that Trump chose to choose, all of which are deliberately hurting American families economically. While he has broken the job market. And absolutely failed in any rational attempt to tackle inflation. And now he's threatening to jail the Fed chief, which should devalue the dollar and inch us that much closer to needing a wheelbarrow full of bills to buy a loaf of bread. Who's on his side at this point? Who is he winning over? They said it couldn't be done, but Congress is waking up. Yes, this Congress. And I can hear you scoffing at me through the television. I can't. Look up what I said about the science funding. I know you don't believe me. Just look it up. The Congress in its way is waking up. The courts are waking up. The people are absolutely fully awake. We are getting there, you guys. We are not even a year into this mess yet. And already it is all systems go. Stay with us tonight. We got a lot to get to. what do you know about the family detention center in dilly texas it's where our government imprisons immigrant parents children and even newborns a place with putrid drinking water food with bugs and worms and even a confirmed measles outbreak these conditions are unsafe and inhumane the refugee and immigrant center for education and legal services or raices is the only legal aid provider inside Dilley day in and day out. We're there right now defending immigrants rights to due process and filing emergency petitions to free families illegally detained. You can fuel our fight to protect the rights of our children, our neighbors, and all of us. Donate at freeallfamilies.org. That's freeallfamilies.org. This message comes from the International Rescue Committee. Right now, in places like Gaza, Sudan, and Ukraine, conflict and disaster have forced millions of families into temporary shelters without basic supplies and in urgent need of aid. With your help, the International Rescue Committee is on the ground in more than 40 countries, delivering food, clean water, shelter, and medical care where it's needed most. Donate today by visiting rescue.org slash rebuild. Upgrade your bathroom routine with the Cottonelle cleaning duo their toilet paper and flushable wipes feature cleaning ripples designed to help you come clean using them together leaves you feeling cleaner and fresher than dry toilet paper alone cottonelle gives you that kind of clean that makes you want to come clean about everything else like admitting you've been rocking press on nails since 2008 it's the clean that boosts your confidence and keeps you feeling fresh all day If the idea of killing Renee Nicole Good was to make people afraid to protest, or afraid to go out and be an observer of ICE operations, you know, following agents, blowing whistles, monitoring what they're doing, taking photos and video of what they're doing, that kind of thing. If the idea was to scare people off doing things like that, it really seems to be having the opposite effect. If the idea was to make American cities and Americans who object to what ICE is doing back down. That very extra clearly is not working specifically in Minneapolis. Today, the state of Minnesota, along with the twin cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis, sued the Trump administration. They're calling the massing of Trump's federal agents, their quote, a federal invasion. City of Chicago and the state of Illinois filed a similar lawsuit today seeking a court order essentially to evict the plague of Trump's agents who have invaded their city and their state. If the point of surging thousands of federal agents into downtowns and strip malls and neighborhoods. The point of shooting people was to frighten Americans out of protesting against them and following them around and watching them like hawks. That is definitely failing. One of the places it's failing is in schools. For the countless and varied volunteer ice watch groups in Minneapolis right now, schools have become a real priority. I showed you footage earlier of school kids in Minneapolis walking out today in protest of ICE. At schools, drop-off and pickup have been where volunteers have been forming human chains to protect students and staff as they come and go. The group Take Action Minnesota is telling the Wall Street Journal that they've mobilized around a thousand volunteers, mostly parents, for public schools in Minneapolis. Volunteers have been showing up at drop-off and pickup. They've been signing up to help immigrant families delivering groceries to them if that's what it takes, if they're too afraid to leave home. But they've got whistles when they're doing this work, whistles to blow in case ICE shows up to let everybody know what's happening to give people a chance to protect themselves. One leader of Take Action Minnesota telling the Wall Street Journal, quote, we wanted to have folks ready to respond. Amanda Otero continuing, quote, everyone is all aligned. We don't want ICE in our schools. Joining us now is Amanda Otero. She is a Minneapolis parent. She's co-executive director of Take Action Minnesota. Ms. Otero, I really appreciate you taking the time to be here tonight. Thank you. Thank you for having me, Rachel. We showed a bunch of footage in the previous segment about some of the really chaotic violence that's been carried out by Trump's federal agents in your city and the way people are responding, the way people are responding both to the killing of Renee Good, but also responding spontaneously when those acts of violence are happening around the city. Let me just ask you how you're doing, how your community is doing, how you think people are holding up. You know, I'm really angry. A lot of us are angry. Let me take you back to last week, Tuesday morning at my child's preschool as, you know, three and four and five-year-olds were getting dropped off in their little snowsuits. Parents and teachers looked up and not a block away. Federal agents were tear gassing neighbors and arresting legal observers. Parents and teachers worked quickly to get the kids inside and safe. And that's becoming a daily occurrence here in our neighborhoods. And so I'm, yeah, I'm feeling devastated at the trauma and the terror that we're putting our kids and our neighbors through. And I will also say I'm feeling really proud of Minneapolis. We have a lot of love and courage and folks are showing up to take care of each other. And we're not going to stop doing that. In terms of folks showing up, we've heard from some nonprofit groups and some sort of recently formed activist groups saying they've seen a real surge recently in volatilism and people wanting to do this kind of ice observation or kind of community response work, especially in the past week, especially in the week of Ms. Good being killed by an ice agent. Have you seen the same surge in interest at your organization? Absolutely. You know, we have had a surge of federal agents on the ground since December 1st when Operation Metro Surge began. And every day that goes by, more and more people are joining us and playing all kinds of roles. As you've mentioned, Ice Watch and patrolling pickups and drop-offs, but also giving rides to students to school, delivering groceries for families, running errands for them, doing everything we can to keep our neighbors safe. In terms of the kind of involvement that you're seeing, are the people who are volunteering and working with your organization doing those kind of things you just described? Is it generally people who have an activist history, people who've been involved in other sorts of activist groups and other issues over the years? Or are you finding that just regular civilian folks who've never really been involved in things before feel like this moment is different and this is a time to get involved, even if they haven't done this kind of work in previous parts of their lives? I do really feel that everybody, everybody whose values are being violated by this violence on our streets, many people who haven't necessarily, as you say, been an activist before are doing something. And, you know, there's a lot of roles to play. There's a lot a lot of ways to plug in. And people are really yeah, people are really meeting the moment. People who are inspired by what they're seeing in terms of the Minneapolis community response right now and by groups like yours. Do you have any lessons learned or any advice for people in other cities around the country who are thinking they may want to do that kind of work or set up that kind of organization where they live? you know there's no special formula um and it's really just about neighbors looking out for neighbors and doing the regular things that we do again groceries rides um looking out for each other on the street um and you know what i really want folks across the country to know about what's happening here in minneapolis is that we need every single person not just here but everywhere off the sidelines calling for ICE to leave our state to get out of our communities. And we need every elected official, you know, from the highest levels of government on down and from every political party joining us in that fight and in advocating to get ICE out of our communities. Off the sidelines. Amanda Otero, Minneapolis parent, co-executive director of Take Action Minnesota. Thank you so much for your time tonight and good luck. Stay safe. Thank you. All right. Much more news ahead here tonight. Stay with us. If you're a parent and want to help set up your child for success, then IXL is a right for your family As an effective and affordable online learning program IXL covers math language arts science and social studies using interactive practice problems for kids from pre-K to 12th grade. Listeners can get an exclusive 20% off IXL membership when they sign up today at IXL.com slash 20. Visit IXL.com slash 20 to get the most effective learning program out there at the best price. Don't you wish everything was more rewarding? With Rakuten, almost everything is. You can earn cash back on those new shoes you've been wanting. You can save on the next trip you book. You can cash in on groceries. Just join, shop thousands of your favorite brands, and save. And when it's time to redeem those rewards, choose PayPal, check, bill points, or cash out with gift cards. So go ahead. Take a trip. Fill a cart. Order dessert. Rakuten is a world of rewards. Join today for free. Go to Rakuten.com or get the app. That's R-A-K-U-T-E-N. Performance comes down to controlling what you can. For Jessica Pagula, it starts with the air around her. A Blue Air user for over five years, she trusts Blue Signature air purifiers, engineered to perform and designed to impress. Shop BlueAir.com and use code Signature30. I mentioned at the top of the show this giant wave of protests across the country that we saw this weekend and over the past few days. Peaceful, clear, rapidly organized protests in response to the ICE killing of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis. There's more protests on the way, including an atypical one that we're going to be watching closely tomorrow in Washington, D.C. The reason I say it's atypical is because this one is going to be at the headquarters of U.S. Customs and Border Protection in Washington. A vigil and protest there tomorrow. Democratic Senator Chris Murphy, Democratic Congressman Maxwell Frost, both expected to be there. Senator Murphy and Congressman Frost have both said they'll vote against any funding for the entire Department of Homeland Security as long as Trump keeps sending immigration agents to attack American cities. Ahead of that protest at CBP headquarters in D.C. tomorrow, organizers are asking Americans to do their part wherever they live. The group Indivisible is one of the organizers. They're urging Americans to contact their member of Congress, no matter who your member of Congress is, to tell your personal member of Congress that they need to vote no on any funding for the Department of Homeland Security unless DHS changes the way federal immigration agents are operating. The message from Indivisible is, quote, tell Congress to rein in ice now. Ice out for good. Joining us now is Ezra Levin. He's the co-founder of Indivisible, which is one of the organizations behind tomorrow's rally and vigil in Washington. Ezra, it's nice to see you. Thank you very much for being here. Great to see you, Rachel. I want to ask you about this planned event tomorrow, but I want to ask you to open the aperture a little bit And talk to me about where you think we are right now, almost exactly one year since Trump was inaugurated for his second term in terms of who is standing up against Trump, how people are standing up against him and what the protest movement in particular against him is accomplishing, what the status of it is. What's your view? Rachel, I hate to take us back to early 2025, but if your viewers don't mind, I'd like folks to remember how dark everything was back then. It wasn't just that Trump was coming in with his regime and his Project 2025 agenda. Everywhere we looked, elites were collapsing, whether it was media institutions or law firms or universities or leaders of the Democratic Party. They were looking for ways to just bow down to Trump. And I think the story of 2025 is the story of elites collapsing in the face of an authoritarian threat and normal everyday people saying, uh-huh, we're not going to accept this. Starting with hands off in April with 1,300 events nationwide to No Kings 1 in June on Donald Trump's birthday to No Kings 2 in October. We saw three of the five largest protests in American history last year, and we're 12 days into this year, Rachel, and we've already seen another one of the largest protests in history against this regime. And these were organic protests that came together, as you said, in the space of 48 hours. So I think where we are now is one, an authoritarian regime that is undeniably weakened compared to where it was a year ago. Its support is drastically lower. It has met defeat again and again and again at the ballot box and in the courtroom and in the court of public opinion. And also we, us pro-democracy Americans, we have not won yet because a weakened authoritarian regime is in many ways more dangerous. And I hate to say this, Rachel, but I believe it to be the case. I think it's going to be worse before it gets better. But I think it's going to get better because we're going to make it better. We saw what making it better looks like. We saw organic outrage, which is the responsibility of Americans everywhere to display outrage right now at what this regime is doing. That outrage is our job. The event tomorrow is with elected officials. Elected officials can display outrage. I like some outrage from elected officials. But their job, their job is to act, to use the leverage that they have to make our lives better. And that's what Chris Murphy and that's what Maxwell Frost and that's what some leaders at the local level are talking about doing now. We as Americans need to cheer them on. And for those Democrats and other elected officials from any party who are not standing up in defense of their constituents, we need to put the pressure on them so we see some change. As I started off the show tonight talking in part about what's going on in Congress, where we do actually see some signs of life. the War Powers Resolution against what Trump did in Venezuela in the Senate, the discharge petition in the House on health insurance premiums, on the Affordable Care Act, even an effort that didn't work, but an effort mounted, a serious effort mounted to overturn two Trump vetoes. We are expecting more from Congress, including in its funding bills. We are seeing them act to, for example, completely counteract Trump's demanded cuts to science, including basic science and the National Science Foundation and these things. And I can feel I can feel through the ether people responding to that by dismissing it and saying, oh, Congress doesn't matter. The legislative branch of government doesn't do anything. They're only a source of of outrage or disappointment. There's no reason to look to them for anything. But if we are standing up our democracy, if we are trying to backstop our democracy, part of it is Congress asserting itself. I feel like what you are talking about tomorrow from Senator Murphy and Congressman Frost, bringing them to CBP headquarters, talking about defunding homeland security, what we are seeing, the sort of little sparks of life in Congress is actually, to me, quite central to the process of defending small d democracy and making sure that our constitutional republic survives. I wonder if you have the same sense of American cynicism about that right now, but also its possibility. Look, Congress is our voice in the federal government. The good news about the event tomorrow is while it is in Washington, D.C., and it's at 5 p.m., please come on down if you're in the area. You don't have to go to Washington, D.C. to have your voice heard, Rachel. You've got one U.S. representative and two U.S. senators. And at the end of this month, not after the midterms, not sometime in the distant future, at the end of this month, those representatives and those senators are going to vote on whether to empower Trump to launch more wars and send more secret police forces to your communities to terrorize and murder residents of those communities. They have power. The question is whether they use it. How do we get them to do their job to use the power that they've got? We use our power, which is our voice. Now is the time to make some noise, Rachel. Now is the time to make some noise. So you should be calling your members of Congress if you're watching this tomorrow. You should be showing up at their district office and telling them, now is the time for you to stand up for me. I'm outraged. It's your time to act. Ezra Levin, the co-founder of Indivisible. Ezra, thank you very much for your time tonight. Good luck. See you soon. We'll be right back. Stay with us. All right. This involves both a scoop and something to watch out for tomorrow. Back in September, the White House put pressure on Trump's handpicked U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia that he had to bring charges against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Tish James. Trump's U.S. attorney in Virginia quit in response to that pressure. So Trump replaced him with Lindsey Halligan, a White House aide who had never before prosecuted a case. She actually did manage to bring charges against Comey and Tish James for a hot minute before a federal judge dismissed the charges, finding, among other things, that Lindsey Halligan had been illegally appointed to that job, that she was not, in fact, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. The Justice Department is appealing that, but apparently the administration has nevertheless been trying to resurrect the case against James Comey anyway, and now they have failed at it again. Today, MSNOW's Carol Lennig and Ken Delaney were first to report that Trump's Justice Department has fired now the second in command under Lindsey Halligan at that U.S. attorney's office because he also declined to pursue the Comey case. And this is maybe not the best time for Lindsay Halligan to be without a second in command in that office, because get this, in a totally different case, a different federal judge has ordered that Lindsay Halligan has until tomorrow to explain to the court why she is still going around calling herself the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia when legally and plainly she is no such thing. The judge has ordered that, quote, Ms. Halligan shall further explain why her identification does not constitute a false or misleading statement. The judge says that could, quote, constitute misconduct and be grounds for discipline. Again, she has to explain why she's still calling herself a U.S. attorney. That response from Lindsay Halligan is due tomorrow. Watch this space. just one last thing ahead of the mlk day holiday on monday here on sunday night on the eve of the mlk holiday we're going to air the documentary i recently made about civil rights legend andrew young who was one of dr martin luther king's most trusted advisors that documentary that i produced it's called andrew young the dirty work if you haven't yet seen it we're going to be re-airing that this upcoming Sunday here on MSNOW at 10 p.m. Eastern time. All right, that's going to do it for me for now. Real talent is defined by what people can do, not where they learn to do it. So by stopping at the education section of a resume, you might throw away the perfect hire. Skills First Hiring helps you see talent others miss, like more than 70 million stars, skilled through alternative routes. Let their story unfold and gain a competitive advantage because hiring managers who start with skills are 60% more likely to find a successful hire. Hire skills first. 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