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The Dictatorship

Team Trump targets post-Watergate reforms, one by one

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Team Trump targets post-Watergate reforms, one by one

For proponents of ethical reforms, transparency and good government, the aftermath of the Watergate scandal and Richard Nixon’s resignation was an important and productive time. The White House controversy was so systemic, and the political fallout was so dramatic, that policymakers agreed to create all kinds of new limits and guardrails intended to prevent future presidential abuses, while trying to restore public confidence in the wake of a governmental crisis.

Presidents serving in the post-Watergate era didn’t always appreciate these restrictions, but they recognized the legal restraints — up until very recently.

Take the Presidential Records Act, for example. The post-Watergate law was created to force presidents to turn over all their records to the National Archivers, as part of a larger effort to combat corruption and ensure White House transparency. Last week, Donald Trump’s team unilaterally decided it doesn’t think the Presidential Records Act is constitutional and that it no longer intends to comply with the 48-year-old law.

It was a step down a familiar path. The New York Times published a memorable analysis on this in January:

From the opening days of his second term, President Trump took aim at Watergate’s ethical checkpoints as if in a shooting gallery. First, he fired 17 inspectors general, a job established in the Watergate era to ferret out waste, fraud and abuse in government. He also fired the head of the Office of Special Counsel, an independent agency created by legislation in 1978 to protect government whistle-blowers. Then he fired the director of the Office of Government Ethics, created around the same time to guard against financial conflicts of interest by top government officials. And he has used the Justice Department and the F.B.I. as political tools, roles they worked to shed after Watergate.

By this measure, Americans are watching an era come to a rapid and painful end. A half-century ago, policymakers responded to a corrupt, power-hungry Republican president by establishing an ethical framework that proved quite effective, until another corrupt, power-hungry Republican president decided that the framework was getting in the way of his authoritarian-style ambitions, and a GOP-led Congress decided to let him do as he pleases.

It’s tempting to think the United States can do what it did before, learning similar lessons and rebuilding the guardrails after Trump’s term ends. If Nixon’s downfall opened the door to sweeping ethics breakthroughs, what’s to say Trump’s eventual departure from the White House won’t create a similar opportunity?

The answer is electoral: At the start of 1975, in the first Congress after Nixon resigned in disgrace, there were 60 Senate Democrats and 292 House Democrats (roughly two-thirds of the chamber). The party wanted to impose post-Watergate reforms, and the legislative lifts were easy.

I have no idea what’ll happen in the 2026 and 2028 elections, but it would take comparable Democratic majorities to respond to the Trump era the way Congress responded to Nixon decades ago.

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

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The Dictatorship

New York gubernatorial candidate’s militia reportedly exposed

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New York gubernatorial candidate’s militia reportedly exposed

The identities of several members of the militia created by New York GOP gubernatorial candidate Bruce Blakeman have reportedly been revealed.

Blakeman’s quest to stand up a force of armed and deputized citizens in his capacity as Nassau County executive — to help with purported “emergencies” — has garnered comparisons to Nazi brownshirts. The Long Island militia has also been likened to the Ku Klux Klan and slave patrols during the era of chattel slavery, both of which deployed militias filled with civilians to terrorize Black people.

A onetime umbrella-holder for Donald Trump and a devout MAGA loyalist, Blakeman has said he will never disagree with Trump in public. He also has said that his militia of “special deputies” — which could be unleashed at his whim — might be used to quell civil rights demonstrationssaying it would be available “if there was a riot.”

Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman speaks about his run for governor of New York State.
Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman speaks about his run for governor of New York State on Dec. 22, 2025 in Mineola, NY. Howard Schnapp / Newsday RM via Getty Images

Democrats have sounded the alarm that some of the militia members were unqualified and, in some cases, had run into issues with the law themselves. Such fears were seemingly confirmed by a recent court filing by Democrats who are suing to thwart the militia, as reported by Newsday.

The list of deputies includes Zachary Cohen, a nephew of Blakeman’s who, according to Newsday, “has no law enforcement or military experience.”

Per Newsday:

According to the documents, Zachary Cohen obtained his pistol license in the spring of 2024 but is without law enforcement or military experience. His résumé indicated he manages his family’s real estate portfolio as president and CEO of AMZ Management in Rutherford, New Jersey.

Cohen writes in his cover letter: ‘I am extremely interested in serving my community and following in the footsteps of my Uncle Bruce Blakeman.’

Cohen could end up working alongside a former New York Police Department officer whose manhandling of a suspect led to a massive civil settlement by New York City in 1995. (The officer was acquitted of assault.)

In the application Donald Alesi submitted to join the volunteer program he touted his decorated service with the FBI and the NYPD’s narcotics division, recently released court documents show. Omitted are dozens of allegations and complaints throughout his time as an officer in the 1980s and 1990s, including having been one of two Brooklyn officers charged with assaulting the driver of a passenger van, leaving the man paralyzed from the neck down.

While Alesi and the other officer were acquitted in the criminal case, the city paid a $16.6 million civil settlement, according to news reports. Newsday found the information in a search of police misconduct records using Alesi’s name.

Newsday did not obtain comment from Cohen or Alesi. When asked for comment on the names being released, a Blakeman spokesperson told Newsday that the judge in the case had ties to Democrats and should recuse himself.

The list reportedly includes a bunch of other people whose expertise on matters of law enforcement is questionable — to say the least. For example, there are several registered gun owners listed, including a former team dentist for the NHL’s New York Islanders, a former member of Blakeman’s transition team and a tractor-trailer driver.

A dentist. A truck driver. A Blue Light News. Sounds like a fine group of people if you’re looking to haul cargo, write a press release or replace a cavity. But nothing about this bunch of gun-toting volunteers suggests they have any competency more useful in this case than their willingness to take orders at the behest of a Trump sycophant.

Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.

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The Dictatorship

Monday’s Mini-Report, 4.6.26

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Monday’s Mini-Report, 4.6.26

Today’s edition of quick hits.

* An understandable reaction: “During his press briefing today, Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, reacted to Trump’s Easter Sunday post threatening to destroy bridges and power plants if Iran doesn’t make a deal soon. ‘We were alarmed by the rhetoric, seen in that social media post that threatened American attacks on power plants, bridges and other infrastructure should Iran not agree to a deal,’ Dujarric said.”

* Crisis conditions in Lebanon: “More than 1.1 million people, which is more than 20% of Lebanon’s population, are now displaced within the country’s borders as Israel continues its military offensive, the U.N. said in a report today. A third of those affected are children.”

* Artemis II: “NASA’s Artemis II mission made history on Monday by sending humans farther from Earth than ever before.”

* Keep an eye on this one: “Almost immediately after an immigration agent shot and wounded a Venezuelan immigrant in Minneapolis this winter, the federal government cast the injured man as an attempted murderer and the agent as the victim of a brutal beating. That version of events began unraveling when prosecutors dropped felony charges against the injured man, Julio C. Sosa-Celis, and one of his housemates, Alfredo A. Aljorna, who had fled from immigration agents. Yet video footage of the shooting, newly obtained by The New York Times, raises questions about why it took weeks for the government’s case to fall apart.”

* The latest on the Bannon case: “The Supreme Court on Monday granted the Trump Justice Department’s request to vacate an appeals court ruling against Steve Bannon, after the Department of Justice told the high court that it wants to dismiss the matter that was brought against the Donald Trump ally during the Biden administration.”

* U.S. marshals waived training rules? “Members of Elon Musk’s private security team were deputized as federal agents last year even though some of the billionaire’s guards lacked the required training and law enforcement experience, according to newly released government emails.”

* It’s not at all clear why anyone would follow this executive order as binding: “President Donald Trump has signed a second executive order aimed at fixing college sports, this time laying out specific transfer and eligibility rules, limiting how athletes can be compensated for their name, image and likeness and threatening schools that violate rules with financial penalties, the White House announced Friday.”

* Noted without comment: “Just a few months after opening, the controversial Trump Truth Store in [Chicago suburb] Crystal Lake has temporarily shut down, citing a drop in sales amid the ongoing Iran war.”

See you tomorrow.

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an MS NOW political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

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The Dictatorship

Privacy official resigns at DOJ’s Civil Rights Division as Trump menaces midterms

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Privacy official resigns at DOJ’s Civil Rights Division as Trump menaces midterms

An official in charge of privacy issues at the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, which oversees voting rights laws, resigned last week as the Trump administration continues to pursue sensitive voter data for its voter suppression efforts.

NPR reported Friday on the resignation of Kilian Kagle, who worked in the division led by far-right lawyer Harmeet Dhillon:

Kilian Kagle was the chief FOIA officer and senior component official for privacy for DOJ’s Civil Rights Division before leaving his post in recent days. His resignation has not been previously reported. For nearly a year, the DOJ has been making unprecedented demands for sensitive voter data from most states — including voters’ driver’s license numbers, partial Social Security numbers, dates of birth and addresses — that some say violate privacy law.

In the past year, President Donald Trump has suggested that “we shouldn’t even have” midterm elections in 2026 and that Republicans should “take over” elections in parts of the country controlled by Democrats. And to help implement his autocratic ambitions, the president has installed election-denying zealots at the Justice Department, which has demanded sensitive voter information from states to feed into the administration’s error-prone SAVE voter eligibility tool. More than a dozen Republican-led states have complied with the demand, while other states’ attorneys general are suing in court — with good reason.

Kagle confirmed his departure to NPR but declined to comment. Neither Kagle nor the Justice Department responded to MS NOW’s request for comment.

Though he didn’t give a specific reason for his departure, Kagle joins scores of other former employees from the Civil Rights Division who have left as Dhillon has perverted it into an agency known for assaulting many of the rights it historically defended, including voting rights. In December, almost 300 now-former DOJ employees signed an open letter warning that Dhillon and her allies at the division were undermining civil rights and causing lasting harm to the department’s credibility.

They wrote:

Every election brought changes, but the fundamental mission of our work remained the same. That’s why most of us planned to stay at the Division following the 2024 election. But after witnessing this Administration destroy much of our work, we made the heartbreaking decision to leave — along with hundreds of colleagues, including about 75 percent of attorneys. Now, we must sound the alarm about the near destruction of DOJ’s once-revered crown jewel.

The first year of Trump’s second term has been a nightmare for privacy experts, who raised issues to NPR about the president’s efforts to acquire sensitive voter data.

Others have sounded the alarm elsewhere on other controversies, including the administration’s interest in high-tech surveillance tools that have been deployed by authoritarian governments.

Ja’han Jones is an MS NOW opinion blogger. He previously wrote The ReidOut Blog.

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