The Dictatorship
J.K. Rowling’s ‘plan’ to erase trans women can’t change this simple truth

On Wednesday morning, my social feeds showed me two stark reactions to a historic rolling back of trans rights in the United Kingdom. J.K. Rowlingauthor of the “Harry Potter” series and notorious anti-trans advocateposted a photo of herself smoking a cigar and holding a glass of wine on her yacht. “I love it when a plan comes together,” the caption reads.
The photo struck a sharp contrast to what I saw from my trans friends in the U.K., many of whom posted about being terrified of their own government and wishing to flee the country.
That’s because the “plan” Rowling was referencing was a U.K. Supreme Court judgment that ruled trans women should not be considered womenessentially wiping out decades of civil rights advances for British transgender people. The judges heard from representatives of numerous anti-trans special interest groups, but no trans people or trans rights groups provided testimony, in part because individuals and organizations that fund and support trans rights thought they would not be believed and feared negative repercussions.
The exclusion of trans voices in the case matches what happened with the Cass Report, a document commissioned by the U.K. National Health Service purporting to investigate youth gender medicinefrom last April, in which experts in trans health care were similarly disregarded.
There’s also a significant financial component, with Rowling reportedly donating £70,000 to For Scotland Womenthe organization that brought the original suit.
The “plan” Rowling was referencing was a U.K. Supreme Court judgment that ruled trans women should not be considered women.
The ruling comes in the same week HBO announced the initial casting for its upcoming “Harry Potter” series, featuring John Lithgow as Dumbledore. Lithgow’s career got a serious boost in the early 1980s after he was nominated for the best supporting actor Oscar for playing the trans woman character Roberta Muldoon in “The World According to Garp.” Now, he’s working on a project that could indirectly financially contribute to the marginalization of trans people in the U.K., should Rowling, who is an executive producer on the project and will earn royalties from the show, choose to contribute more of her earnings to anti-trans projects.
The ruling was another setback for trans rights in a year of particularly notable backtracking around the world. In the U.S., the federal government has been largely successful in purging trans people from the military, trans-related ideas and even words ascribed to trans people from government usage. Trans people in America are now unable to get accurate passportsand the Trump administration recently announced it would be cutting federal education funding from the state of Maine because the state refuses to ban two trans girls from playing girls high school sports in the state.
There is thankfully still some protection for those who live in more trans-friendly blue states, so the rights you have as a trans person depend largely on where, geographically, you live within the country.
For trans folks in the U.K., Wednesday’s ruling will no doubt signal that the anti-trans lobby groups that currently have the ear of the Labour government in power can push even further. Though the court ruling didn’t expressly extend into specific policies, we will likely see a push to formalize policies like bathroom bans. Health Secretary Wes Streeting has taken the lead on rolling back access to transition care in the National Health Service. He responded to the now widely denounced Cass Report by instituting a ban on puberty blockers for all trans youth in the country and has directed general providers to withhold transition care like hormones for adults in order to push them into the country’s gender clinic system, which comes with a sometimes decadelong waiting time.
Sitting here as a trans person in the U.S. and watching what’s happening both here and across the pond, it’s difficult for me to say which country has it worse right now. Both countries have billionaire patron saints of the anti-trans movement, with Elon Musk in the U.S. and Rowling in the U.K., with no real financial counterweight on the trans rights side. But both countries are also full of talented, funny, wonderful trans people who simply want to live their lives without the government fumbling around in our underpants all the time.
Here in the U.S. we get millions of dollars in political attack ads and conservative anti-trans activist like Riley Gaines launching a lucrative activist career after finishing tied for fifth with controversial trans swimmer Lia Thomas in a collegiate swim meet.
But the U.S. also has folks like Maine Gov. Janet Mills, who rather famously told Trump “see you in court” to his face when he asked her if her state would comply with his executive order banning trans girls from girls’ school sports. In the U.S., we at least have some Democratic leaders willing to stand up for us, like Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker.
This ruling may have been a significant setback, but there is still nothing that can stop us from simply existing as trans people.
The world has always had trans people, and always will. The J.K. Rowlings of the world come and go, but trans people are eternal, and that feels like a very comforting thought here in the eye of the storm in 2025.
Katelyn Burns is a freelance journalist based in New England. She was the first openly transgender Capitol Hill reporter in U.S. history.
The Dictatorship
‘Not going away’: Conservatives pressure Speaker Johnson over Epstein


-
White House plagued by drum beat for more information on Epstein case
12:53
-
‘They blew it’: NY Gov. slams Republicans, says megabill will have deep impact on state
14:52
-
‘He’s not able to bury this story’: Trump faces revolt from MAGA base
10:11
-
Mamdani will ‘discourage’ controversial term ‘globalize the intifada’: NYT
07:06
-
Now Playing
-
UP NEXT
The real reason the president suddenly sounds tougher on Russia
07:52
-
Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Allon returns in the mystery-thriller ‘An Inside Job’
08:02
-
‘Empire of the Elite’ tracks the glory years of Condé Nast
09:30
-
Democrats need to ‘fight’ and show that democracy can deliver: Stacey Abrams
09:43
-
Charlie Sykes: Questions about Epstein files not going away any time soon
12:47
-
Obama’s call to action for Democrats: ‘Toughen up’ and ‘less whining’
05:39
-
Steve Rattner: Despite Trump’s trade war, markets keep rising
07:46
-
After ‘lackluster campaign,’ Cuomo relaunches an independent bid for NYC mayor
03:43
-
Trump not out of the woods yet with MAGA base, says conservative writer
06:55
-
Joe: Trump loyalists drop decade of rage over Epstein files. Why?
14:29
-
A look inside the alliance between the ‘Big Three’
05:55
-
Trump was inevitable but also beatable, says host of ‘Autocracy in America’ podcast
06:55
-
‘Toxic impact’: Joe slams Secy. Noem calling judge ‘idiot’ over immigration detention ruling
05:24
-
Trump turns on Putin, announces he’ll send Patriot missiles to Ukraine
04:50
-
White House plagued by drum beat for more information on Epstein case
12:53
-
‘They blew it’: NY Gov. slams Republicans, says megabill will have deep impact on state
14:52
-
‘He’s not able to bury this story’: Trump faces revolt from MAGA base
10:11
-
Mamdani will ‘discourage’ controversial term ‘globalize the intifada’: NYT
07:06
-
Now Playing
‘Not going away’: Conservatives pressure Speaker Johnson over Epstein
10:44
-
UP NEXT
The real reason the president suddenly sounds tougher on Russia
07:52
The Dictatorship
Trump told MAGA to be quiet about Jeffrey Epstein. Fox News obeyed.

President Donald Trump’s allies at Fox News — and other major MAGA media figures — are obeying his marching orders to stop talking about Jeffrey Epsteinthe disgraced financier who was awaiting trial on charges that he sexually abused dozens of underage girls when he died by suicide in jail in 2019.
Prominent MAGA voices were in near-open rebellion last week after the Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation issued in an unsigned July 6 memo stating that there was no “credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions,” and that investigators “concluded that Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide in his cell.” Those conclusions contradicted dogmas pushed by Trumpist talking heads — including FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino. Within days, many MAGA diehards were calling for Attorney General Pam Bondi’s resignation or firing.
By Sunday, the simmering discontent seemed primed to boil over, as Fox News anchors and prominent pro-Trump speakers at a summit organized by Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA warned that if Trump didn’t listen to his base, he risked losing them. But the president instead issued a statement that evening in which he stood by Bondi and demanded that his allies “not waste Time and Energy” on the Epstein saga.
By Sunday, the simmering discontent seemed primed to boil over.
Trump’s statement put to the test the MAGA pundits and influencers who had told their audiences for years that wealthy elites, corrupt officials and the mainstream press were covering up for Epstein. And most of them, particularly Fox’s anchors and hosts, promptly bent the knee.
Epstein’s name was brought up only eight times across the network’s programming on Monday, with its first reference coming well into the 6 p.m. hour. By contrast, Fox name-checked former President Joe Biden 158 times that same day.
Jesse Watters, who holds down the 8 p.m. time slot previously held by stars Bill O’Reilly and Tucker Carlson, provides a case study of the network’s compliance. The Fox host mentioned Epstein’s name across more than 100 episodes of his programs over the last six years. Watters said he was “leading the charge to expose Jeffrey Epstein’s list of fixers, clients, and famous friends,” unlike the corrupt mainstream press whose silence he claimed aided the “powerful people [who] want to keep you from knowing about Epstein’s world.”
But on Monday night, Watters obliged the demands of a powerful person with myriad, longstanding ties to the disgraced financier: Trump. The sole discussion of the Epstein story on his broadcast came during a segment in which his producer interviewed beachgoers.
Watters’ prime-time colleagues Sean Hannity and Greg Gutfeld likewise completely ignored the Epstein story on their Monday broadcasts. In the 7 p.m. slot, Laura Ingraham offered the following take: “As conservative influencers were eating their own about Epstein, the president was stealing the show on the one-year anniversary of the day he almost lost his life.”
In general, MAGA commentators have either gone silent like Fox News or are publicly championing the Trump line.
The silence from Watters and Hannity is particularly embarrassing because earlier this year both had claimed that members of the so-called “deep state” aimed to keep the Epstein documents from Bondi so she couldn’t expose them. The new narrative the president laid out on Sunday — that the likes of former President Barack Obama, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and a slew of supposed deep state officials “created” the so-called Epstein files in order to undermine the MAGA movement — contradicts the hosts’ story.
Outside the Fox News portion of the MAGA ecosystem, there’s been somewhat more debate about the Justice Department memo. Some MAGA influencers pointed out the absurdity of Trump’s new narrative. “Barack Obama wrote the Epstein files? LOL. This is outright embarrassing,” commented Candace Owens on X. Benny Johnson, responding on a livestream Sunday, mentioned Trump’s theory and remarked“What?”
Others were even more critical, at times even implicating Trump himself. “Either Pam Bondi is royally screwed up … or there is something there and it’s being covered up and the president blessed it,” said Megyn Kelly, a member of the diaspora of former Fox News hosts who now compete for its audience. Daily Wire podcaster Matt Walsh said, “There just is no option that allows you to just, you know, vindicate the Trump administration entirely.”
But those cases seem like the exceptions — in general, MAGA commentators have either gone silent like Fox News or are publicly championing the Trump line.
“Is it time to move on from the Jeffrey Epstein case?” asked Souza Dinesh podcaster. “I want to argue the answer is yes.”
“I’m going to just have to defer to President Trump on this thing,” Newsmax’s Greg Kelly offered.
“I’m done talking about Epstein for the time being,” Kirk said Monday. “I’m gonna trust my friends in the administration” (though on Tuesday, Kirk claimed, “When I said ‘for the time being,’ I was talking yesterday”).
Cracks keep forming in the coalition that united around a shared hatred of the left and put Trump in office. Those fractures will almost certainly continue as his administration’s actions anger its various factions, and they may even come to threaten Trump’s cultlike hold over the MAGA movement and the largely sycophantic right-wing media. But we’re not there yet.
Matt Gertz is a senior fellow at Media Matters for America, a progressive research center that monitors the U.S. media. His work focuses on the relationship between Fox News and the Republican Party, media ethics and news coverage of politics and elections.
The Dictatorship
Trump’s deportation machine is writing its own rules

The last major overhaul of American immigration law took place decades ago and there’s been no will from Congress to revamp it since then. Instead, a string of presidents has sought to interpret the law to fit their preferred policies. What we’re seeing under President Donald Trump, though, is a federal bureaucracy abandoning the law as it exists, rewriting the rules that would constrain it from exercising maximum cruelty and dehumanization toward immigrants.
His determination marks a major shift in the way ICE functions and threatens to transform the immigration system more broadly overnight.
Over the last six months, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement has served as the tip of the spear in the Trump administration’s mass deportation push. According to The Washington Postacting ICE director Todd Lyons issued a memo last week that instructs officers to hold immigrants in their custody “for the duration of their removal proceedings” — however long that takes. He asserted that immigrants who’d previously been allowed to request bond hearings may not be released from ICE custody” with release on parole relegated to being a rarity.
Lyons’ decision is based on “a section of immigration law that says unauthorized immigrants ‘shall be detained’ after their arrest,” according to the Post, “but that has historically applied to those who recently crossed the border and not longtime residents.” A spokesperson for ICE told NBC News on Tuesday that the decision to prevent detainees from receiving bond hearings “closes a loophole” in current law, arguing that people arrested in the country’s interior should be treated the same as those apprehended at the border.
His determination marks a major shift in the way ICE functions and threatens to transform the immigration system more broadly overnight. There was already massive backlog of immigrations proceedings even before this recent escalation. According to ICE’s annual report for fiscal year 2024there are “more than 7.6 million noncitizens in removal proceedings or subject to final orders of removal on the agency’s non-detained docket.” If all of them were to have been held for the entirety of their proceedings, the number would wildly dwarf the 155,655 inmates currently held in the entire federal prison system.
Moreover, the detainees held in ICE facilities last year were only in custody for “an average of 46.9 days.” The report further noted that “detention is not punitive, and the agency detains noncitizens only when required by law or based on the unique circumstances of the case.”
Lyons’ orders entirely overturns that general guidance to instead make detention the norm rather than the exception.
This policy change will only place further strain on a system that has been tasked with widening its dragnet and ramping up its arrest numbers. NBC News reported last week that while detentions are surging under Trump, deportations are lagging: “According to ICE data, its agents arrested roughly 30,000 immigrants last month, the most since monthly data was made publicly available in November 2020. But the number of immigrants deported in June — more than 18,000 — amounted to roughly half the number of arrests, according to internal figures obtained by NBC News.”
The imbalance has led to a lack of space in ICE’s current facilities, where NBC News also recently reported that overcrowding has prompted complaints from detention centers across at least seven states of “complaining of hunger, food shortages and spoiled food.” A tsunami of funding from Congress for immigration enforcement is meant to vastly expand ICE’s available detention space. The new policy from Lyons helps ensure all those new beds will be filled — and then some.
These moves notably aren’t exclusive to ICE but taking place across the administration.
But turning over some of those beds will be easier — thanks to another new policy rewrite from Lyons. In a memo issued last weekthe acting director took advantage of a recent Supreme Court ruling to speed up the process for deporting immigrants to an “alternative” country than the one they left behind. In some cases, these people may be sent to a country where they know nobody, don’t speak the language, and have no support with less than 24 hours’ notice to challenge the order.
These moves notably aren’t exclusive to ICE but taking place across the administration. The Justice Department last month circulated a memo outlining its Civil Division’s new priorities. Rather than focusing on voting rights or violations of the Civil Rights Act, the few remaining lawyers at the storied branch must now prioritize denaturalization among other new focal points. The memo from Assistant Attorney General Brett Shumate provides 10 potential categories for the latter cases, including any referred to the division that it “determines to be sufficiently important to pursue.”
The overbroad scope of that last catch-all category is worrisome — but the one that most concerns me targets “individuals who acquired naturalization through government corruption, fraud, or material misrepresentations.” While that language sounds relatively benign, it dovetails well with right wing rhetoric that falsely claims that the Biden administration “illegally” allowed millions of immigrants into the country. Any migrant who came in during those years and gained citizenship could potentially see their naturalization threatened because of this new focus.
Disturbingly, ICE has also taken upon itself to rewrite the oversight laws that Congress has passed, limiting the window in which legislators can turn up unannounced for inspections. Members of Congress are explicitly allowed to visit facilities that “detain or otherwise house aliens” without providing notice, but they must now provide ICE with a 72-hour advancing warning before visiting an ICE field office. While the memo draws a distinction between offices and detention centers, the law doesn’t, and migrants have been reportedly held at field offices for days on end due to overcrowding.
Taken together, these revisions provide a window into how Trump’s deportation machine will operate when it is finally fully up to speed.
The steady inflow of migrants to detention centers and their speedy exfiltration to random countries is poised to escalate into a near automated process, with no oversight or chance for the banished to appeal their fate. In stripping these supposed undesirables of their rights to due processtheir freedom while awaiting a hearing, and the protections the law should provide them, the administration is robbing them of their very humanity.
How much longer then will it take for even this streamlined process, devoid of any chance of appeal or semblance of mercy to be considered too time-consuming or expensive? What then will be the fate of the people stuffed into these camps with no hope of release? The answer may be one that we swore as a civilization never to allow happen again.
Hayes Brown is a writer and editor for BLN Daily, where he helps frame the news of the day for readers. He was previously at BuzzFeed News and holds a degree in international relations from Michigan State University.
-
The Josh Fourrier Show8 months ago
DOOMSDAY: Trump won, now what?
-
Uncategorized8 months ago
Bob Good to step down as Freedom Caucus chair this week
-
Politics8 months ago
What 7 political experts will be watching at Tuesday’s debate
-
Politics8 months ago
How Republicans could foil Harris’ Supreme Court plans if she’s elected
-
Economy8 months ago
Fed moves to protect weakening job market with bold rate cut
-
Economy8 months ago
It’s still the economy: What TV ads tell us about each campaign’s closing message
-
Politics8 months ago
RFK Jr.’s bid to take himself off swing state ballots may scramble mail-in voting
-
Uncategorized8 months ago
Johnson plans to bring House GOP short-term spending measure to House floor Wednesday