The Dictatorship
CIA director’s missing Signal messages pour gasoline on major Trump administration scandal

Happy Tuesday! Here’s your Tuesday Tech Drop, a collection of the past week’s top stories from the intersection of tech and politics.
Missing Ratcliffe messages
The CIA’s chief data officer testified in court last month that he was unable to locate any “substantive messages” from CIA Director John Ratcliffe’s Signal app as part of an ongoing lawsuit stemming from his and other top Trump officials’ use of the messaging app to share highly sensitive U.S. military plans.
According to ABC News:
Hurley Blankenship, CIA’s chief data officer, told a federal judge overseeing a lawsuit challenging the use of Signal that he was only able to retrieve “residual administrative content” from Ratcliffe’s personal Signal account. “I used that terminology because the screenshot does not include substantive messages from the Signal chat; rather, it captures the name of the chat, ‘Houthi PC small group’, and reflects administrative notifications from 26 March and 28 March relating to changes in participants’ administrative settings in this group chat, such as profile names and message settings,” Blankenship wrote.
For the record, all defendants in this lawsuit — including Ratcliffe — were instructed by a judge on March 27 to preserve all Signal messages sent from March 11 to March 15. And several current and former U.S. national security officials told CNN they worry messages Ratcliffe sent in the thread may have damaged the country’s ability to gather intelligence on the Houthis going forward. In light of all that, the missing messages certainly raise eyebrows. American Oversight, the organization that filed the lawsuit, suggested in a statement that the revelation about Ratcliffe’s messages raises questions about whether some in the administration are destroying evidence.
Read more on ABC News.
Database tracking DOGE gets deleted
The Trump administration is being sued over its deletion of an online database meant to track how federal funds are being spent. The nonprofit group that brought the lawsuit, Protect Democracy Project, says the database offered “the only public source of information on how DOGE (Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency) is being funded — information that Congress and journalists have used in reporting and oversight.”
Read more at The Hill.
Zuckerberg takes the stand
Meta’s high-stakes trial, in which the U.S. government has accused Facebook’s parent company of holding a monopoly through its ownership of WhatsApp and Instagram, kicked off on Monday, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg taking the stand. The case could determine whether Meta has to spin off any of its social media companies to comply with anti-monopoly laws.
Read more at Reuters.
And check out this recent CNBC interview with Lina Khan, the former Federal Trade Commission chair who oversaw the agency when it first filed the lawsuit against Meta during the Biden administration.
Snooping suspicions
As part of a recent report for The Guardian, federal employees shared their fears that they are being snooped on by Trump administration officials trying to crack down on dissent. According to the paper, the employees fear that Trump appointees “may be snooping on conversations, using software to track computer activity and, possibly, using artificial intelligence to scan for disloyalty or mentions of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) buzzwords.”
Read more at The Guardian.
Immigrants face digital death under Trump administration
I recently wrote about the highly unusual and overtly cruel strategy the Trump administration is using to dehumanize and deter migrants by marking thousands of them as dead in the federal government’s Social Security system to effectively cut them off from obtaining employment or other government services.
Check out my post about it here.
MAGA masculinity and Trump’s tariff war
I also recently appeared on “Alex Witt Reports” to discuss my recent post about the trend of right-wing influencers promoting the idea that Trump’s destructive trade war and efforts to increase manufacturing are good for men — and their dignity — in particular. It’s part of the absurd trend of hypermasculine influencers who have aligned themselves with Trump.
Read my post about it here. And you can watch my conversation with Witt below.
Sen. Wyden’s cyber-related stoppage
Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., has put a hold on Trump’s nominee to lead the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, saying he won’t release the nomination unless the administration publishes a report on vulnerabilities in the telecommunications industry.
Read more at Reuters.
Palantir plays to the MAGA crowd with ‘meritocracy’-based fellowship
Palantir, a tech company that was co-founded by far-right investor Peter Thiel and whose CEO has been gung-ho about using the company’s potentially deadly technologies to aid Donald Trump’s mass deportation and military plansrecently launched a “Meritocracy Fellowship” program in response to the company’s claim that “college is broken” and “meritocracy and excellence are no longer the pursuits of educational institutions.” To be honest, this sounds like little more than a jab at affirmative action policies that promote diversity on college campuses, which right-wingers falsely suggest is antithetical to meritocracy.
Read more about the program at Business Insider.
Un-4chan-ate circumstances
4chan, a forum website popular among far-right extremists, was recently hit with a major hack that has people wondering what — if any — data related to the site may have been exposed.
Read more at The Verge.
The Dictatorship
‘We are all afraid’: GOP’s Lisa Murkowski admits she fears retaliation

More than any Republican in Congress, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska can be counted on for candor about the state of her party in the era of Donald Trump. In fact, late last year, about a month after the president won a second term, the senator conceded that she felt “more comfortable” with no party label than with “an identity as a Republican.”
The comments came a few years after Murkowski also saidin the wake of the Jan. 6 attack, “If the Republican Party has become nothing more than the party of Trump, I sincerely question whether this is the party for me.”
This week, the Alaskan raised eyebrows again with comments she hasn’t made publicly before. The Anchorage Daily News reported:
U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski told a room full of Alaska nonprofit leaders that the tumult of tariffs, executive orders, court battles, and cuts to federal services under the Trump administration are exceptionally concerning. “We are all afraid,” Murkowski said, taking a long pause. “It’s quite a statement. But we are in a time and a place where I certainly have not been here before. And I’ll tell ya, I’m oftentimes very anxious myself about using my voice, because retaliation is real. And that’s not right.”
A video of the clip reinforced the impression that the senator chose her words with care.
At the same event, Murkowski described some of the Trump administration’s recent moves as “unlawful” and “against the law.” She similarly expressed concern about the degree to which USAID had “just been obliterated,” described proposed GOP cuts to Medicaid as “devastating” and efforts to politicize the federal judiciary have brought the country to “a very dangerous place.”
Just as notably, the four-term Republican lawmaker acknowledged that Congress has allowed the executive branch to claim too much power. “It’s called the checks and balances. And right, now we are not balancing as the Congress,” Murkowski said.
In recent days, as coverage of the senator’s comments circulated, the broader conversation about her perspective has generally fallen into two camps. One was sympathetic: Many observers have noted that it’s exceedingly rare for any congressional Republican to make comments like these, out loud and in public, and that Murkowski is to be applauded for acknowledging the fears of retaliation that members feel.
The alternative reaction to her comments has been far less charitable: Murkowski is in a position of influence, and she could be using her power far more effectively to push back against the White House, its abuses, its corruption and its authoritarian tactics. There’s nothing wrong with applauding her comments, the argument goes, but it’s just as important to press the Alaskan on her support for Trump-backed bills and some of the White House’s highly unqualified nominees.
Indeed, let’s not forget that when the Republican Party’s far-right budget plan came to the Senate floor a couple of weeks ago, two GOP senator joined Democrats in voting against it — and Murkowski wasn’t one of the two.
Which reaction is the right one? I don’t want this to sound like a cop-out, but I think both are right. I’m glad Murkowski occasionally speaks out like this, and if it inspires some of her GOP colleagues to do the same, it could make a difference. I also believe that if Murkowski recognizes the seriousness of our current circumstances, it’s incumbent on her to do more than just offer candid comments to her constituents.
As the senator no doubt knows, she has other options — legislatively, procedurally, tactically, etc. — and if she really wants to shake things up, Murkowski can announce that she’s ending her formal affiliation with the GOP altogether, even if she continues to caucus with the party.
It’s genuinely awful that she’s afraid and feeling “very anxious,” and I couldn’t agree more that the circumstances that have led to these fears are “not right.” But it’s within the Alaskan’s power to help force a change, and I’ll continue to hope that she takes advantage of these opportunities.
Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an BLN political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”
The Dictatorship
Team Trump reportedly contacted the IRS about a ‘high-profile friend of the president’

Election conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell has been in the news quite a bit lately. A few weeks ago, for example, the MyPillow founder expressed an interest in launching a Republican gubernatorial campaign in Minnesota.
A couple of weeks later, someone described as a “correspondent” for Lindell’s media operation appeared at a White House press briefing and asked a cringeworthy and overly sycophantic question about Donald Trump, sparking widespread ridicule. This week, the conspiracy theorist was back in the news, telling a judge he’s struggling to pay court-imposed sanctions because his finances are “in ruins” and “nobody will lend me any money anymore.”
But things aren’t all bad for Lindell. As The Washington Post reportedhe apparently still has friends in high places.
A Trump administration official in March asked the IRS to review audits of two “high profile” friends of President Donald Trump, including MyPillow chief executive and conservative political personality Mike Lindell, according to two people familiar with the request and records obtained by The Washington Post
According to the report, which has not been independently verified by BLN or NBC News, David Eisner, a Trump appointee at the Treasury Department, contacted senior IRS staff last month about an audit Lindell was facing. Soon after, the same official reportedly contacted the tax agency again, this time about a Republican state senator in Kansas named Rick Kloos.
Eisner reportedly used the phrase “high profile friend of the president” to describe Eisner and Kloos, and wrote that each was “concerned that he may have been inappropriately targeted.”
A related report in The New York Times noted that the IRS did not act on Eisner’s outreach, but the efforts “alarmed agency staff that President Trump hoped to use the tax collector to protect his friends and allies from normal scrutiny, concerns that have only grown as the Trump administration clears out agency leadership and pushes it to carry out Mr. Trump’s directions.”
And therein lies the point: If the IRS is going to survive and maintain its integrity, it must maintain its independence. The agency cannot be a political weapon — though, in the Harvard casethere’s reason to believe Trump sees it as a partisan tool — and just as notably, it can’t offer special treatment to the president’s pals and those politically aligned with the White House.
Nina Olson, who served as the national taxpayer advocate across multiple Democratic and Republican administrations, told the Post of the allegations, “That’s so inappropriate. In my 18 years as the national taxpayer advocate with over 4 million cases that came into the Taxpayer Advocate Service, in that time with taxpayers experiencing significant problems with the IRS, I have never had a Treasury official write me about a case.”
A spokesperson for Trump’s Treasury Department made no effort to deny the claims, instead telling the Times that Eisner “acted appropriately” and simply shared “relevant information” with the IRS. (Eisner did not respond to requests for comment, the Post reported, and a representative from the IRS declined to comment.)
Kloos’ attorney, meanwhile, told the Post that the Kansas legislator is “certainly not a close friend of the president”; he doesn’t know why Eisner contacted the IRS on his behalf; and he’s been engaged in a yearslong court fight over his organization’s tax-exempt status.
As for Lindell, he suggested that this is all just a misunderstanding and that the Treasury Department had “misconstrued” his request, which he said actually stemmed from a problem he was having with the Employee Retention Credit.
I don’t imagine we’ve heard the last of this one.
Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an BLN political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”
The Dictatorship
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