Top DOJ Official Shut Down Enforcement Against Crypto Companies While Holding More Than $150,000 in Crypto Investments

This article first appeared at ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive their biggest stories as soon as they’re published.

Before Todd Blanche could be confirmed as the second-highest official at the Justice Department, he had to satisfy the concerns of ethics officials.

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Brief Point

Let me reiterate a general point I’ve made in other posts. I don’t think there’s any actual reason we’re invading Venezuela or trying to decapitate its government or whatever we’re doing. I think there are two or three different factions in the government each pushing a very hostile policy toward Venezueala for differing reasons. Meanwhile, Trump thinks it’s cool and has a personal beef with Maduro. That combination of factors created a lot of forward momentum within the U.S. government with nothing pushing back in the opposite direction. That gets you to today. My point is that it’s a mistake to think there’s a “real” reason mixed in with other subterfuges and rationales, or that it’s important to find out which one the “real” reason is. It’s not that linear or logical.

First Thoughts on Trump’s Excellent Venezuela Adventure

Let me share a few thoughts about the U.S. action overnight in Venezuela. I say “action” because it’s not clear to me that the U.S. itself (as in the people calling the shots in Washington) know what this was, or have decided. I woke up in the middle of the night and saw the news of some major U.S. attack. That only registered a few WTFs in my mind. Then I woke up again at maybe 4 a.m. and saw at the least the claim that U.S. forces had captured and exfiltrated Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. Then my WTFs escalated to 11.

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Trump Ushers in a New Era of Imperial Rivalry

Let me take an initial crack at assessing what the United States has done in Venezuela with the proviso that time can easily prove such analyses mistaken. Donald Trump’s claimed takeover of Venezuela has been compared to what the American invasion aimed to do in Iraq in 2003, but I’d go back instead to the American intervention in the Spanish-American War in 1898 and its conquest and takeover of Cuba and the Philippines, about which I wrote in Folly of Empire

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Moments From Day 1 of the US Supposedly Running Venezuela

  • As you’ve no doubt seen by now, Trump held a press conference during which he stated that the U.S. will “run” Venezuela through a “a group.” He also talked a lot about oil.
  • Trump was asked about additional military involvement in the country to facilitate this plan to “run” it. “No, if Maduro’s vice president — if the vice president does what we want, we won’t have to do that,” he said. Venezuela’s vice president, Delcy Rodríguez, has today been publicly reaffirming that Maduro remains president and demanding the U.S. release him.
  • Congress was not notified in advance of the strike, members have said and Secretary of State Marco Rubio has confirmed. “This was not the kind of mission that you can do congressional notification on,” Rubio said during Saturday’s press conference.
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Trump Says US Has Captured Venezuela’s President Maduro

Trump’s full Truth Social post from 4:21 a.m. ET:

The United States of America has successfully carried out a large scale strike against Venezuela and its leader, President Nicolas Maduro, who has been, along with his wife, captured and flown out of the Country. This operation was done in conjunction with U.S. Law Enforcement. Details to follow. There will be a News Conference today at 11 A.M., at Mar-a-Lago. Thank you for your attention to this matter! President DONALD J. TRUMP

Experts are condemning the strikes as illegal under international law, and questioning why Congress wasn’t consulted.

Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) said on X that he had spoken with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who “informed me that Nicolás Maduro has been arrested by U.S. personnel to stand trial on criminal charges in the United States.” Maduro was indicted in 2020. There is no known indictment of his wife.

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Rural Health Fund Awarded To All 50 States, But Trump Admin Can Still ‘Claw Back’ Cash

Rural health systems had already been struggling for years when, earlier this year, they became a legislative focus for President Donald Trump and some GOP congress members. As the president prepared to make the most sweeping cuts to Medicaid and Medicare in the programs’ histories, a handful of GOP senators initially withheld their support for Trump’s major tax cut and defense spending package until Senate Republican leadership did something to make up for the devastating cuts to health care for low income and elderly Americans, especially those from states with large rural populations. Republican leadership added a provision to the “Big, Beautiful Bill” that created a Rural Health Transformation Fund. The fund directed $50 billion of the $3.4 trillion reconciliation package, or about 1.5% of the bill’s total cost, to rural health initiatives over five years. The first year of payments were announced Monday.

The first iteration of the $50 billion fund saw all 50 states receive money, with states receiving an average of $200 million, according to a release from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS). 

And despite concerns that the CMS could use its scoring rubric to disadvantage blue states and benefit states that voted for Trump, initial awards show a seemingly apolitical distribution of funds. 

Since half of the fund will be distributed equally among the states, those with smaller populations received more money on average than the most populous states. Five of the top 10 states that received the most money per capita are blue states, with Alaska receiving the most money per capita at $368. That’s key, since Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) was among the most vocal GOP senators expressing concern about how Medicaid cuts would impact her constituents. Maine is also among the top 10 states receiving the most money per capita. Though Kamala Harris won the presidential election there, its GOP Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) was another GOP legislator heavily involved in rural healthcare negotiations last summer.

A TPM analysis using U.S. Census Bureau data on states’ rural populations and rural hospital data from the Center for Healthcare Quality and Payment Reform through October 2025 shows:

  • Blue states on average received a larger share of funding per rural hospital than red states.
  • Rhode Island, which has one rural hospital and an about 10% rural population, received the most money per rural hospital.
  • California received the least money per capita, at $6 per resident.
  • There is a slight correlation between a state’s rural population and the amount of money the state received per capita.

Before the program was rolled out, healthcare stakeholders told TPM that its parameters could disadvantage certain states and benefit others. The CMS scoring system distributed the funds based on a complex weighted formula which included a range of partisan policy-based factors, including whether states restrict SNAP users from buying “non-nutritious foods” and whether states plan to require Trump’s “Presidential Fitness Test” in schools. State scores could also be impacted if the state restricts certain health insurance plans, sometimes called junk plans, which don’t comply with Affordable Care Act coverage standards.

“We have an administration which just says right out, ‘We’re gonna cut money to blue states and blue communities,’ and it is doing it,” Adam Searing, an attorney and research professor at the Georgetown University McCourt School of Public Policy, told TPM in November. “If you happen to live in a community that we disagree with politically, too bad.”

While initial award amounts suggest nonpartisan fund distribution, there are still concerns about strings attached to the Rural Health Transformation Fund. 

Since the funding will be recalculated annually over the life of the five-year program, CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz reportedly said in a call with reporters that the administration could  “claw back” funds if a state doesn’t enact policies it committed to in its application. Searing suggested that was a possibility in November, telling TPM that CMS “can do pretty much what they want and the states can’t complain about it.”

There’s also the issue that the fund hardly covers the day-to-day operations of struggling rural health facilities. Only 15% of the fund’s cash can be used to cover uncompensated care, which experts have said will become a significant issue when health care cuts in the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” hit. None of the money can help supplement underpayment from other insurance sources including private plans. And just 10% of the money can be used to cover administrative costs. The rest of the money must be designated for three or more approved initiatives, including workforce recruitment and retention, support for substance use treatment and mental health services, chronic disease management and prevention, and technology improvements.

And ultimately, healthcare experts have told TPM, $50 billion is a drop in the bucket compared to the impending health care cuts and rural hospital deficits. 

“It’s $1 trillion in cuts over a decade and $50 billion to help try to shore it up,” Rob Davidson, an emergency physician in rural West Michigan told TPM in July. “That’s 5% of the problem in a 5 year span. That math doesn’t work out.”

In a statement following the award announcements, the National Rural Health Association, a nonprofit professional organization, applauded the Trump administration and called the funding “unprecedented.” Despite this, the organization’s statement highlighted that the fund is hardly enough. 

“While this one-time funding grant is significant,” the statement reads, “NRHA reiterates that long-term policies guaranteeing sustainable funding for rural health care are needed to support providers and maintain access to care.”

Who Controls AI Exactly?

I’ve been getting lots of your emails about Artificial Intelligence and its place right at the center of so many inflection points — alliances in the new world of oligarchs, the global authoritarian movement, the Gulf princes and their money and more. One of those emails was from TPM Reader AO. AO’s central point was that this is principally a technology, productivity and economics question, and really not a political one. People may hate it but mostly because they don’t know what it is. And in any case it doesn’t matter. Because this is a transformative technology being driven by private capital investment and it’s a change that’s coming regardless of what anyone thinks. With that roll out you may think we were off to a bad start. But it was an interesting conversation and it continues. I reiterated various points I’ve made in posts here, etc. But there was one point that I realized I hadn’t made explicitly enough in those posts.

As I’ve said before, I think it’s really important to distinguish between the actual technology — LLM-based AI — and the political formations forming around it. They’re not the same thing. They’re both really important on their own terms. It’s important to give both sufficient room in a discussion of either topic.

So here goes.

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DC Still Flooded With National Guard After Trump Pulls Them Out Of Other Blue Cities

National Guard troops still patrol non-state Washington D.C. after President Trump announced the end of deployments (or attempted deployments) in Chicago, Portland and Los Angeles. 

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Status Check on Trump’s Nationwide Gerrymandering Assault to Predetermine Control of Congress

For months now, the Trump administration has been aggressively pressuring red states around the country to gerrymander their congressional maps. It’s part of a sweeping and unprecedented scheme for which President Trump has often been a mouthpiece, aimed at making it easier for Republicans to maintain control of the U.S. House in the 2026 midterm elections. 

The Trump administration saw some early wins in its pressure campaign, but more recently it has faced a series of significant setbacks that indicate the larger effort may be losing steam.

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