• GAYETY.COM
    Why Lady Gaga Prerecorded Her 2025 VMAs Performance Despite Making an Appearance
    Even while juggling a sold-out international tour, Lady Gaga made sure her presence at the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards was unforgettable, though not exactly in the way fans might have expected.Despite performing across town at Madison Square Garden the same night, the pop icon still managed to take home one of the evenings top honors, and debut a dazzling performance that, yes, was prerecorded, but no less theatrical.How Gaga Pulled Off Her Double-Duty NightThe 14-time Grammy winner and LGBTQ+ icon prerecorded her VMAs performance during her Sept. 6 stop at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The decision to film ahead of time wasnt a diva move, it was a scheduling necessity. While the VMAs aired live from UBS Arena in Elmont, New York, Gaga was literally in the middle of her critically acclaimed MAYHEM Ball Tour.Rather than sit this year out, the Abracadabra singer made sure to give fans, and her fellow artists, a jaw-dropping performance. The show-stopping segment was a high-concept blend of avant-garde visuals, wild choreography, and the otherworldly aesthetic that only Gaga can deliver.While fans at the awards show watched her performance on-screen, the crowd at MSG got to witness it live in all its chaos and glamour. Gaga, now 39, made it a night to remember for both audiences.A Quick Appearance, and a Powerful SpeechDespite the logistical juggling act, Gaga did briefly appear at the VMAs in person, taking the stage early in the evening to accept the coveted Artist of the Year award.Clad in a sculptural, shimmering ensemble (because of course), she delivered a deeply moving speech about what it means to be an artist in 2025, and why its never been more important.She dedicated the award to her fans, whom she lovingly calls her Little Monsters.Her time at UBS Arena was brief, though. Gaga exited the stage with a heartfelt farewell: I wish I could stay and watch all these amazing performances, but I have to go back to Madison Square Garden.VMAs, Mayhem, and a Monster-Sized YearGaga entered the 2025 VMAs with 12 nominations, including Artist of the Year, Best Album for Mayhem, and multiple nods for her music video Abracadabra, including Best Direction, Best Art Direction, and Best Cinematography.She also scored a string of nominations alongside longtime friend and collaborator Bruno Mars, thanks to their chart-topping duet, Die with a Smile. The soulful, disco-inspired track earned recognition in categories like Best Pop, Best Collaboration, Song of the Year, and Video of the Year.Her MAYHEM album, which dropped in March, has dominated playlists and concert venues alike. The tour, which includes stops in New York, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Chicago, and cities across Europe, has showcased a bolder, darker Gaga. With theatrical stage design, aggressive couture, and a return to her Born This Way-era intensity, The MAYHEM Ball is Gaga at her most experimentaland perhaps most personal.A Minor Setback in MiamiJust days before her epic VMAs weekend, Gaga was forced to cancel her Miami show on Sept. 3 due to vocal strain. She took to Instagram to explain the tough decision, writing:Gaga, who is known for singing live every night, expressed concern about long-term damage if she pushed herself too far.Miamis Kaseya Center also confirmed the cancellation and promised fans that details on a rescheduled show or refund process would be announced soon.Love on TourWhile MAYHEM is full of fire and fury, Gaga has also shared some softer moments with fans this tour, particularly when it comes to her fianc, Michael Polansky.During a Los Angeles stop, she gave him a loving shout-out onstage, calling him the love of my life. At another performance, she broke down in tears while revealing how Polansky gave her a pre-show pep talk to help manage nerves. The raw emotion only reinforced the vulnerability and realness fans have come to love her for.Source
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    Overreacting to Week 1: Steelers found their QB, Giants should change QBs?
    Will Jaxson Dart take Russell Wilson's job soon? Are the Dolphins doomed? We sized up Week 1 overreactions.
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    Steelers' jab at Jets tops Week 1 trolls
    The Steelers made sure to poke fun at the Jets multiple times after winning in Week 1.
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    Lions falter in opener, call issues 'correctable'
    The Lions' offense had its worst day since 2023, something coach Dan Campbell blamed on not being clean enough, but he says it is correctable.
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    Daboll noncommittal on Giants QB for Week 2
    Giants coach Brian Daboll was hardly definitive on his QB situation entering Week 2 following Sunday's loss to the Commanders, one that saw Russell Wilson struggle throughout.
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    Steelers' Rodgers shows Jets he still has it in win
    Aaron Rodgers threw four touchdown passes Sunday to help the Steelers win their opener and show the Jets that he 'still can' play.
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    West Point Alumni Group Cancels Award Honoring Tom Hanks
    The group was to bestow the Sylvanus Thayer Award on the actor, but it said it was canceling the event to focus on preparing academy cadets for the future.
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    Trump Downplays Post Threatening Chicago, Saying He Wants to Clean Up City
    The president had said on social media that Chicago was about to find out why its called the Department of WAR, drawing a fierce rebuke from Democrats.
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    Ricky Martin Honored as First-Ever Latin Icon at the 2025 VMAs
    Ricky Martin brought both glamour and gratitude to the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards, held Sept. 7 at New Yorks UBS Arena. The 53-year-old superstar was named the shows first-ever Latin Icon, cementing his four-decade career in music with a moment that was equal parts personal and historic.Jessica Simpson, longtime friend and fellow 90s pop staple, presented the honor. When Martin took the stage, he wasted no time in turning the spotlight back on fans.This is for you all. I am addicted to your applause, Martin said, visibly emotional. Thats why I keep coming back.It wasnt just the audience in New York he was addressing. Its you, not only here in America, but all over the world, he added. We just want to unite countries, break boundaries and keep music alive.A Career That Changed Pop MusicMartins win wasnt just about his hits, it was about the cultural wave he helped create. Songs like Livin La Vida Loca didnt just top charts, they rewired the sound of mainstream pop. At a time when Latin artists were rarely front-and-center on U.S. radio, Martin crashed through that barrier and left the door open for an entire generation.And lets be honest: he still looks better on the red carpet than most 20-somethings. His tailored look and flash of tattoo ink drew plenty of attention before he even stepped on stage.A Family First DedicationIn one of the nights most touching moments, Martin dedicated the award to his four children, Matteo and Valentino, 17, Lucia, 6, and Renn, 5. The dedication gave fans a glimpse into the softer side of the performer who has spent much of his life commanding stadiums.It was a reminder that while Martin may be a global icon, hes also a dad navigating school runs and family life. That mix of superstar and father is part of what makes him such a singular figure in pop culture.An Energetic MedleyBefore leaving the stage, Martin delivered what can only be described as a masterclass in charisma, a medley of hits that had the crowd on its feet. It was a reminder that while hes already cemented his place in history, his performances remain as magnetic as ever.The 2025 MTV VMAs, hosted by LL Cool J, featured performances by Lady Gaga, Sabrina Carpenter, Doja Cat and more. But Ricky Martins Latin Icon honor added a new chapter to the awards history, and reminded everyone why hes still the king of la vida loca.Source
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    Mariah Carey Makes Lambs Proud with First Ever History-Making Wins at the 2025 MTV VMAs
    Mariah Carey delivered a momentous night of nostalgia, glitter, and overdue recognition at the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, as the elusive chanteuse made a legendary return to the VMAs stage, and finally took home her very first Moon Person trophy.A Long-Awaited First VMA WinAhead of the televised show, Carey won the award for best R&B video during the MTV VMAs pre-show for her sultry, retro-soul single Type Dangerous. The track beat out a stacked category that included Chris Brown, SZA, The Weeknd and Playboi Carti, and Summer Walker. For an artist whos long been associated with iconic visuals and genre-defining music, the win marked a long-overdue moment.Though Carey has been nominated multiple times throughout her career, this was her first-ever competitive VMA win, a fact not lost on fans or the superstar herself.Returning to the Stage After 20 YearsLater in the evening, Carey took to the stage at New Yorks UBS Arena to deliver a career-spanning performance her first appearance on the VMAs stage in 20 years. Her set was a nostalgic medley packed with hits, glitter, and diva grandeur.Wearing a shimmering gold bodysuit under a champagne-hued silk robe, Carey opened with her classic Fantasy, moving seamlessly through Honey, Heartbreaker, Obsessed, and We Belong Together. She also performed her latest single Type Dangerous and teased an unreleased track, Sugar Sweet, giving fans a taste of whats to come on her upcoming album.Vocally polished and visually dazzling, the performance reminded audiences why she remains one of pops most enduring icons.Receiving the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard AwardThe biggest honor of the night came when Carey received the prestigious Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award, presented to her by Ariana Grande. The award celebrates artists who have made a profound impact on music videos and pop culture, and Careys resume speaks for itself.From the glossy yacht party of Honey to the comedic brilliance of Touch My Body, Carey has long used music videos as a way to expand her storytelling, image, and persona. With a knack for camp, glamour, and character work, she has built a visual legacy that spans decades.As she accepted the award, Carey joked about the long wait for VMA recognition, saying, I cant believe Im getting my first VMA tonight What in the Sam Hill were you waiting for? Her speech was warm and reflective, touching on her love for visuals, her gratitude to her fans the Lambily and her place in music video history.A Full-Circle MomentThe honor held special meaning for Carey, who once presented the very same award to LL Cool J in 1997. This year, the rapper hosted the ceremony, bringing the moment full circle in a way only music history could script.Carey now joins an elite group of Vanguard Award recipients, including Madonna, Beyonc, Rihanna, Missy Elliott, Nicki Minaj, and of course, the awards namesake, Michael Jackson.Eyes on the FutureThe night also served as a major launchpad for Careys next chapter. Type Dangerous marks her 50th entry on the Billboard Hot 100 and her first No. 1 on the Adult R&B chart since 2006. The video, directed with flair and packed with classic Mariah humor, features her casting off one dangerous man after another, in stilettos, of course.Her upcoming 16th studio album, Here for It All, is set to release September 26 and promises to blend her classic sound with a fresh take. Featuring collaborations with Kehlani and Shenseea, the album is rumored to be one of her most eclectic yet, fusing pop, R&B, Caribbean influences, and plenty of vocal fireworks.Source
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    UCLA suspends backup QB Clarkson after arrest
    UCLA backup quarterback Pierce Clarkson was arrested on an unspecified felony charge Friday and has been indefinitely suspended from the team.
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    Parsons gets sack, brings heat in Packers debut
    Less than two weeks after being traded to Green Bay, Micah Parson got his first sack and was second on the team with three pressures during Sunday's win versus Detroit.
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    As Carlos Alcaraz wins another US Open title, can anyone challenge these Big Two?
    With the past eight major titles, Alcaraz and Sinner are clearly dominant. Can anyone compete with them?
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    Ranking Week 1 fantasy football winners and losers and injury impacts from Sunday
    A summary of Week 1's best and worst fantasy performances, biggest storylines and historical perspective.
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    60K club: Matthew Stafford becomes 10th player to throw for 60,000 yards
    Matthew Stafford needed 191 yards coming into Week 1 to join the prestigious quarterback club.
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    John Burton, 92, Dies; California Political Boss Who Staged a Comeback
    He left the House of Representatives while struggling with a crack addiction, his political career seemingly over. Actually, it had just begun.
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    Denny Hamlin wins at Gateway to advance in playoffs
    Denny Hamlin won from the pole position at World Wide Technology Raceway, playing the strategy perfectly to lead the final 25 laps in his series-high fifth victory this season.
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    McLaren walking a 'fairness' tightrope with Norris, Piastri
    Sunday showed where the limitations are in McLaren's handling of the Lando Norris-Oscar Piastri rivalry.
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    Wave retire Morgan's No. 13: 'Etched in history'
    Alex Morgan jerseys filled the concourses and seats of Snapdragon Stadium on Sunday, with the iconic No. 13 of every era -- from the United States' red, white and blue to the San Diego Wave's navy and pink -- on the backs of fans.
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    Bills score 16 unanswered late to shock Ravens
    Josh Allen led Buffalo to three scores in the final four minutes, the last a 32-yard field goal by Matt Prater as time expired, and the Bills rallied from 15 points down to stun the Baltimore Ravens 41-40 in a season-opening Sunday night thriller.
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    Transfer rumors, news: Man City to rival Liverpool for Guhi in January
    Manchester City could go up against Liverpool for Crystal Palace defender Marc Guhi in January. Transfer Talk has the latest news, gossip and rumors.
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    Indias Investors, Defying Tariffs, Keep Pouring Money Into Stocks
    Middle-class Indians have been plowing their savings into the stock market, making it far less vulnerable to the shocks of a trade war.
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    Japans Prime Minister, Shigeru Ishiba, Resigns: What to Know
    Japan, one of the worlds most stable democracies, is experiencing unusually rapid change. Shigeru Ishibas departure could herald a leadership crisis.
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    France, at an Impasse, Heads Toward Another Government Collapse
    A vote of confidence scheduled for Monday appears set to topple Prime Minister Franois Bayrou and put more pressure on President Emmanuel Macron.
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    Wilson scores 30 again as Aces' win streak hits 14
    A'ja Wilson set a league record with her 13th game of at least 30 points, helping the Aces win their 14th game in a row Sunday over the Sky.
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    Memorable Moments of the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards: Mariah Carey, Lady Gaga and More
    Mariah Carey and Busta Rhymes were honored for the first time, Lady Gaga crossed town and Doja Cat took it back to the 1980s.
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    A New War Is Emerging in Colombia
    Colombias return to conflict is a lesson in how hard it is to sustain progress toward peace.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Ariana Grande and Lady Gaga shine at the MTV VMAs with wins and performances
    Christian Breslauer, left, and Ariana Grande accept the award for video of the year for "Brighter Days Ahead" during the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025, at UBS Arena in Elmont, N.Y. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)2025-09-07T04:01:11Z Ariana Grande and Lady Gaga set the tone at the MTV Video Music Awards on Sunday night with career-defining moments of their own.Grande scored two honors video of the year and best pop video and had the audience buzzing when she thanked her therapists and gay people during her acceptance speech. Gaga, the nights top nominee, kicked things off by winning artist of the year before later delivering on her promise to perform. She hit the stage at Madison Square Garden after her acceptance speech, which sent the audience into a frenzy at the UBS Arena where the VMAs were being held. In her earlier remarks, Gaga stressed the deeper meaning of artistry. Being an artist is an attempt to connect the souls of people all over the world, said Gaga, who performed Abracadabra and The Dead Dance, a single from the Netflix series Wednesday. Being an artist is a discipline and craft into reaching someones heart where it grows its roots, reminding them to dream. Being an artist is a responsibility to smile, dance, cry. She dedicated the award to her fans and paid homage to her fiance, Michael Polansky, who co-executive produced her latest album, Mayhem.Creating with you has been a beautiful thing, she said. Tributes to Mariah Carey and Ozzy OsbourneMariah Carey basked in the love of her fans and reflected on her storied career as she accepted the Video Vanguard Award. Grande presented the honor with a heartfelt tribute, calling Carey the soundtrack of our lives. Grande then added As a vocalist, theres only one queen. And thats Mariah.While taking the stage in a satin gold robe that gave way to a glittering bodysuit and matching heels, Carey delivered a career-spanning medley of hits from Fantasy to We Belong Together to Obsessed. The performance also spotlighted tracks from her landmark 10th album, The Emancipation of Mimi, which recently turned 20. I cant believe Im getting my first VMA tonight, Carey said before she jokingly asked. I have one question: What in the Sam Hill were you waiting for? Im just kidding. Thank you. I love you. The late Ozzy Osbourne was celebrated in fitting fashion when some of rocks biggest names took the stage in his honor. Aerosmiths Steven Tyler and Joe Perry, British firebrand YUNGBLUD and Nuno Bettencourt united to deliver a medley of Osbournes greatest hits including Crazy Train, Changes and Mama, Im Coming Home.Osbournes son, Jack and several of his children, shared a video message to viewers about the beloved musician.I know for sure it would make him incredibly happy to see these great musicians carry on his legacy and help inspire the next generation of rockers, Jack Osbourne said.In the words of our papa, Lets go crazy, Ozzy Osbournes grandkids added, referring to his popular song Crazy Train.Osbourne became a household name on MTV also the home of the VMAs with his familys hit reality series The Osbournes, which ran from 2002 to 2005. That same year, the Prince of Darkness cemented his legacy with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.As the tribute ended, the performers yelled Ozzy forever, man! Busta Rhymes and Ricky Martin shout out MTV historyBusta Rhymes was honored with the first ever MTV VMA Rock the Bells Visionary Award during the show and performed several of his hits including Gimme Some More, Scenario, Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See and Pass the Courvoisier, Part II. He was also joined by Joyner Lucas, Papoose and GloRilla as they helped perform the songs with him.During his speech, Rhymes paid tribute to the late Ananda Lewis, the former MTV and BET host who became a beloved television personality in the 1990s with her warmth and authenticity. An incredible woman that loved me and she loved us, he said of Lewis, who died in June after being diagnosed with breast cancer. She loved the culture very much. I miss her very much. The late, great, incredible Royal Empress, Ananda Lewis.Ricky Martin received the first-ever Latin Icon Award following an electric performance on the main stage. He spoke about his 40-year career in music, dedicating the award to his four kids. Martins set served as an anniversary tribute coming 25 years after his breakout VMAs debut in 1999, when he made history as the first male Latin artist to win best pop video.I started when I was a baby working and were still here, he marveled, adding: We just want to unite countries, we just want to break boundaries, and we just want to keep music alive. Doja Cat kicks off energetic VMAsThe VMAs, hosted by LL Cool J, kicked off with a freewheeling spirit. During Cool Js opening monologue, a video of Doja Cat mimicking 80s MTV personality Max Headroom interrupted him. Her message transitioned seamlessly into a performance that kicked off with a solo by Kenny G.Doja Cat, who was seen casually chewing on her lipstick on the red carpet, pranced across the stage performing Jealous Type to raucous applause.Going into the show, history was on the line with Taylor Swift and Beyonc vying to become the most awarded artist in VMAs history. Each have 30 and were only nominated in the artist of the year category, so Gagas win will leave them tied for another year.Other performers included Conan Gray, Tate McRae, Jelly Roll, Post Malone, Alex Warren, J Balvin, Sabrina Carpenter and sombr.The 2025 MTV VMAs was broadcast by CBS for the first time. JONATHAN LANDRUM JR. Landrum is an entertainment reporter based in Los Angeles. He reports on television, film and music for The Associated Press. twitter instagram mailto
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    Jackson shoves fan in retaliation in Ravens' loss
    During Sunday's 41-40 loss to the Buffalo Bills in the season opener, Baltimore Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson shoved a fan who slapped Jackson on the helmet, and he later told reporters, "I just let my emotions get the best of me."
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  • Shooting attack on Jerusalem bus kills 4
    2025-09-08T07:32:03Z JERUSALEM (AP) Paramedics said at least four people were killed in a shooting attack in Jerusalem after attackers opened fire in a bus at a busy intersection in north Jerusalem.Paramedics said 15 other people were injured and six are in serious condition.Police said two attackers were neutralized soon after the shooting began, but did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the status of the attackers.The shooting took place at a major intersection at the northern entrance to Jerusalem, on a road that leads to Jewish settlements located in east Jerusalem.Israeli media reported that the two attackers boarded a bus and opened fire. Footage of the attack showed dozens of people fleeing from a bus stop at the busy intersection during the morning rush hour. Paramedics who responded to the scene said the area was chaotic and covered in broken glass, with people wounded and lying unconscious on the road and a sidewalk near the bus stop. There was no immediate comment on the attack from Palestinian militant groups.The war in Gaza has sparked a surge of violence in both the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Israel. Palestinian militants have attacked and killed Israelis in Israel and the West Bank, while there has also been a rise in settler violence against Palestinians. While there have been scattered attacks over the past months in Israel, the last deadly mass shooting attack was in October 2024, when two Palestinians from the West Bank opened fire on a major boulevard and light rail station in the Tel Aviv area, killing seven people and leaving many others wounded. Hamas military wing claimed responsibility for the attack.According to police, the two men opened fire in the Jaffa neighborhood of Tel Aviv, including shooting directly into a light rail carriage crowded with passengers that was stopped at a station.
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    A New Zealand father who evaded authorities with his 3 children for years is shot dead by the police
    A police officer stands near a hardware store in Piopio in the Waikato district of New Zealand, Monday, Sept. 8, 2025. (Ricky Wilson/Stuff via AP)2025-09-08T00:17:25Z WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) A man who evaded authorities with his three children in the remote New Zealand countryside for nearly four years was shot and killed by a police officer Monday, law enforcement said. One child was with Tom Phillips at the time of the confrontation and the other two children were found in the forest hours after the shoot-out, in which an officer was critically injured.The December 2021 disappearance of Phillips and his children now about 9, 10 and 11 years old confounded investigators for years as they scoured the densely forested area where they believed the family was hiding. The father and children were not believed to ever have traveled far from the isolated North Island rural settlement of Marokopa where they lived, but credible sightings of them were rare.Phillips has not been formally identified, but authorities believed he was the man killed. Police officer was shot and critically injuredA police officer was shot in the head and critically injured during a confrontation with Phillips after he robbed an agricultural supplies store early Monday morning, New Zealands Acting Deputy Police Commissioner Jill Rogers told reporters in the city of Hamilton. The child with Phillips at the time of the robbery was taken into custody. The officer was undergoing surgery at a hospital. His injuries were survivable, Rogers said, but he was shot multiple times with a high-powered rifle and further surgeries were expected. Fugitives other two children found hours after shoot-outThe whereabouts of Phillips other two children was unknown immediately after the shooting and authorities held serious concerns for them, Rogers said earlier.About 13 hours after their father was killed, however, Rogers told reporters that the children had been found unaccompanied at a remote campsite in rugged forest. The child taken into custody Monday had cooperated with the authorities, allowing them to narrow the search area, she said. The farm supplies store targeted Monday was in a small town in the same sprawling farming region of Waikato, south of Auckland, as the settlement of about 40 people from where the family vanished. The case has fascinated New Zealanders and the authorities made regular unsuccessful appeals for information.Sightings of Phillips were limited to surveillance footage that showed him allegedly committing crimes in the area. He was wanted for an armed bank robbery while on the run in May 2023, accompanied by one of his children, in which he reportedly shot at a member of the public.Authorities believed Phillips had helpPhillips did not have legal custody rights for his children, Detective Senior Sgt. Andrew Saunders told reporters in 2024. Authorities said they had not had access to formal education or health care since their disappearance. Law enforcement always believed that Phillips had help concealing his family and some residents of the isolated rural area expressed support for him. A reward of 80,000 New Zealand dollars ($47,000), large by New Zealand standards was offered for information about the familys whereabouts last June, but it was never paid. Family had gone missing beforeDecember 2021 was not the first time Phillips prompted national news headlines after disappearing with his children. The family went missing that September, launching a three-week land and sea search after Phillips truck was found abandoned on a wild beach near where he lived. Authorities eventually ended the search, concluding the family might have died, before Phillips and the children emerged from dense forest where he said they had been camping. He was charged with wasting police resources and was due to appear in court in January 2022, but weeks before the scheduled date he and the children vanished again. The police did not immediately launch a search because Phillips, who is experienced in the outdoors, had told family he was taking the children on another trip. He never returned.The search intensified again after several sightings of Phillips in 2023 in the same region where he had vanished. He was last seen on surveillance video in August this year as he robbed a grocery store in the night, accompanied by one of his children. Childrens mother issues a statementThe childrens mother issued a statement to Radio New Zealand on Monday in which she said she was deeply relieved that the ordeal for her children had ended.They have been dearly missed every day for nearly four years, and we are looking forward to welcoming them home with love and care, said the woman, who has been identified in New Zealand news outlets only by her first name, Cat.___This story has been updated to correct the rank of police officer Saunders. CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-MCLAY Graham-McLay is an Associated Press reporter covering regional and national stories about New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific Islands by putting them in a global context. She is based in Wellington. twitter mailto
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    Jury selection begins in the trial of the man accused of attempting to assassinate Trump in Florida
    In this imaged released by the Martin County, Fla., Sheriff's Office, law enforcement officers arrest Ryan Routh, the man suspected in the apparent assassination attempt of Donald Trump, Sunday, Sept. 15, 2024. (Martin County Sheriff's Office via AP, File)2025-09-08T04:09:02Z FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP) Jury selection is set to begin Monday in the trial of a man charged with trying to assassinate Donald Trump while he played golf last year in South Florida.The court has blocked off four weeks for the trial of Ryan Routh, but attorneys are expecting theyll need less time.Jury selection is expected to take three days, with attorneys questioning three sets of 60 prospective jurors. Theyre trying to find 12 jurors and four alternates. Opening statements are scheduled to begin Thursday, and prosecutors will begin their case immediately after that.U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon signed off in July on Rouths request to represent himself but said court-appointed attorneys need to remain as standby counsel. Cannon confirmed during a hearing last week that Routh would be dressed in professional business attire for the trial. She also explained to Routh that he would be allowed to use a podium while speaking to the jury or questioning witnesses, but he would not have free rein of the courtroom. The trial will begin nearly a year after prosecutors say a U.S. Secret Service agent thwarted Rouths attempt to shoot the Republican presidential nominee. Routh, 59, has pleaded not guilty to charges of attempting to assassinate a major presidential candidate, assaulting a federal officer and several firearm violations. Just nine weeks earlier, Trump had survived another attempt on his life while campaigning in Pennsylvania. That gunman had fired eight shots, with one bullet grazing Trumps ear, before being shot by a Secret Service counter sniper. Stay up to date with the latest U.S. news by signing up to our WhatsApp channel. Prosecutors have said Routh methodically plotted to kill Trump for weeks before aiming a rifle through the shrubbery as Trump played golf on Sept. 15, 2024, at his West Palm Beach country club. A Secret Service agent spotted Routh before Trump came into view. Officials said Routh aimed his rifle at the agent, who opened fire, causing Routh to drop his weapon and flee without firing a shot. Law enforcement obtained help from a witness who prosecutors said informed officers that he saw a person fleeing. The witness was then flown in a police helicopter to a nearby interstate where Routh was arrested, and the witnesses confirmed it was the person he had seen, prosecutors have said. The judge last week unsealed the prosecutors 33-page list of exhibits that could be introduced as evidence at the trial. It says prosecutors have photos of Routh holding the same model of semi-automatic rifle found at Trumps club. Routh was a North Carolina construction worker who in recent years had moved to Hawaii. A self-styled mercenary leader, Routh spoke out to anyone who would listen about his dangerous, sometimes violent plans to insert himself into conflicts around the world, witnesses have told The Associated Press. In the early days of the war in Ukraine, Routh tried to recruit soldiers from Afghanistan, Moldova and Taiwan to fight the Russians. In his native Greensboro, North Carolina, he was arrested in 2002 for eluding a traffic stop and barricading himself from officers with a fully automatic machine gun and a weapon of mass destruction, which turned out to be an explosive with a 10-inch fuse. In 2010, police searched a warehouse Routh owned and found more than 100 stolen items, from power tools and building supplies to kayaks and spa tubs. In both felony cases, judges gave Routh either probation or a suspended sentence.In addition to the federal charges, Routh also has pleaded not guilty to state charges of terrorism and attempted murder.
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    France faces more political upheaval as prime ministers fate hangs in the balance
    France's Prime Minister Francois Bayrou leaves the weekly cabinet meeting, Wednesday, March 19, 2025 at the Elysee Palace in Paris. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)2025-09-08T06:21:33Z PARIS (AP) France risks losing its third prime minister in 12 months on Monday, with incumbent Franois Bayrou facing a parliamentary confidence vote that he called but is widely expected to lose, heralding more instability for the European Unions second-largest economy.The 74-year-old centrist prime minister, appointed by President Emmanuel Macron just under nine months ago, is gambling that the vote will unite lawmakers in the sharply divided National Assembly behind proposed public spending cuts that Bayrou argues are needed to rein in Frances spiraling state deficit and debts. But opposition lawmakers are vowing to instead use the opportunity to topple Bayrou and his minority government of centrist and right-wing ministers, an upheaval that would force Macron to begin what could be another arduous hunt for a replacement. A key vote The National Assembly of 577 lawmakers is interrupting its summer recess for the extraordinary session that Bayrou requested, starting at 3 p.m. (1300 GMT; 0900 EDT) Monday. After Bayrou delivers a speech that is expected to argue that belt-tightening is in the national interest, lawmakers will have their say before they vote either for or against his government likely in the late afternoon or early evening. Lawmakers can also abstain. Bayrou needs a majority of for votes to survive. If a majority votes against, Frances constitution decrees that Bayrou would have to submit his governments resignation to Macron, plunging France into renewed crisis. Musical chairs The 47-year-old president is paying a steep price for his stunning decision to dissolve the National Assembly in June 2024, triggering legislative elections that the French leader hoped would strengthen the hand of his pro-European centrist alliance in parliaments lower house. But the gamble backfired, producing a splintered legislature with no dominant political bloc in power for the first time in Frances modern republic.The political uncertainty has largely hobbled Macrons domestic ambitions in his second and last presidential term that ends in 2027. Shorn of a workable majority in parliament for his centrist alliance, Macron has since rotated through three prime ministers, attempting to build consensus and stave off government collapse. Macrons protg Gabriel Attal departed in September 2024, after the Paris Olympics and just eight months in the job. Attal was briefly followed by former Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier, a conservative who became the shortest-serving prime minister in Frances modern republic when he was toppled by a no-confidence vote in December.Macron then tapped his centrist ally Bayrou, a wily political veteran who, despite his experience, is now up against the same wall of unfavorable parliamentary mathematics in the National Assembly where no single political grouping has sufficient seats to govern alone but can still pull the rug from under the government if they team up, targeting Bayrou together despite their sharp political differences. Bayrous frustrationFar-right and left-wing lawmakers who say theyll vote against Bayrous government hold over 320 seats while centrists and allied conservatives have 210, making it seemingly impossible for the prime minister to survive.Bayrou expressed frustration Sunday that bitter rivals on the opposite ends of the political spectrum in the National Assembly are ganging up against him. Whats the point of bringing down the government? These are political groups that not only dont agree on anything but, far worse than that, are waging open civil war against each other, he said in an interview with online media outlet Brut.Pressing problems for FranceIf Bayrou loses, Macron will again be forced to find a successor wholl operate in the same precarious environment and face the same pressing budget problems that have dogged Bayrou and his predecessors. Macron himself has vowed to stay in office until the end of his term but risks becoming a lame duck domestically if political paralysis continues.Under the French political system, the prime minister is appointed by the president, accountable to the parliament and is in charge of implementing domestic policy, notably economic measures. The president holds substantial powers over foreign policy and European affairs and is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Arguing that sharp cuts are needed to repair public finances, Bayrou has proposed to cut 44 billion euros ($51 billion) in spending in 2026, after Frances deficit hit 5.8% of gross domestic product last year, way above the official EU target of 3%.France is also faced with a massive debt crisis. At the end of the first quarter of 2025, Frances public debt stood at 3.346 trillion euros, or 114% of GDP. Debt servicing remains a major budget item, accounting for around 7% of state spending.Bayrous plan, which includes removing two public holidays, has been slammed by his political rivals, who now have a golden opportunity to bring him down.
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  • APNEWS.COM
    Argentina President Milei suffers crushing defeat in Buenos Aires provincial election
    Argentina's President Javier Milei talks after legislative provincial election polls closed in La Plata, Argentina, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Gustavo Garello)2025-09-07T11:08:28Z BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) Argentine President Javier Milei suffered a sweeping setback on Sunday in a Buenos Aires provincial election widely viewed as a political test for his libertarian party and a barometer for how it will perform in crucial congressional midterms next month.Mileis recently formed La Libertad Avanza party captured just 34% of the vote in Argentinas biggest province, losing by a landslide to the left-leaning Peronist opposition, which secured 47% with the majority of ballots counted late Sunday.Milei conceded that his right-wing partys crushing 13-point loss to his populist rivals represented a clear defeat. We suffered a setback, and we must accept it responsibly, Milei told grim-faced supporters at the party headquarters, his tone reflective, even chastened.If weve made political mistakes, were going to internalize them, were going to process them, were going to modify our actions, he said. Still, he vowed to stick with his sweeping economic overhaul, saying: There will be no retreat in government policy. Milei faces a worse-than-expected defeat Argentinas President Javier Milei, center, talks after legislative provincial election polls closed in La Plata, Argentina, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Gustavo Garello) Argentinas President Javier Milei, center, talks after legislative provincial election polls closed in La Plata, Argentina, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Gustavo Garello) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More With Milei struggling to stabilize a sputtering economy and his close associates embroiled by a graft scandal ahead of congressional midterm elections in late October, the results were being closely scrutinized for their potential to rattle investors and roil jittery global markets. Analysts expected La Libertad Avanza to lose by a few points to the Peronists, but his allies feared that a worse-than-expected outcome in Buenos Aires province which makes up nearly 40% of the countrys population would galvanize his rivals at a delicate time. Peronist leader and former President Cristina Fernndez de Kirchner appeared to feel on that she was getting some payback after a corruption conviction and criticism of her economic management, which led to a crisis that Milei inherited.Did you see that, Milei? the two-term former president (2007-2015) wrote on social media platform X. Get out of your bubble, brother. Things are getting heavy. Stakes are raised for congressional midtermsMilei needs to expand his partys tiny minority in the opposition-dominated Congress in midterms next month to fulfill his radical libertarian reforms and make good on his promise to turn the nine-time defaulter into a country capable of servicing its debts. The Peronists are now the largest bloc in Argentinas fragmented congress, and have used their numbers to pass social spending measures that are testing Mileis efforts to balance Argentinas budget. This result is a key data point to understand the social mood where the opposition stands, the state of Peronism and the level of support for the government in Argentinas most important electoral district, said Juan Cruz Daz, the head of Cefeidas Group, a consultancy in Buenos Aires. While not the main national election in October, it is nonetheless a wake-up call for the government, and how it reacts will be crucial to understanding the evolving political map. Supporters of former President Cristina Fernandez take pictures of her at the balcony of her home where she is serving a six-year house arrest sentence for corruption, after legislative provincial election polls closed, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko) Supporters of former President Cristina Fernandez take pictures of her at the balcony of her home where she is serving a six-year house arrest sentence for corruption, after legislative provincial election polls closed, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Sunday, Sept. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko) Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Read More An economy in troubled watersAlthough Milei can boast of bringing down Argentinas triple-digit inflation over the last few months and ending the reckless spending of his Peronist predecessors, Argentines have yet to see the economic revival that was supposed to follow his harsh austerity measures.His government has unwound Argentinas labyrinthine currency restrictions as part of a $20 billion International Monetary Fund bailout, but has not yet won the trust of international financiers who could bring the investment needed to add jobs and turbocharge economic growth in the country. Milei has a very strong ideology, and his vision is that the state has to have a minimal impact and investments have to come from the private sector. But that hasnt materialized yet, said Ana Iparraguirre, an Argentine political analyst and partner at Washington-based strategy firm GBAO.Consumer confidence is falling, unemployment is rising, and interest rates are soaring to record highs as the government repeatedly intervenes in the currency market to prop up the peso and hold down inflation in hopes of placating cash-strapped voters. A battered Peronist party basks in its victoryFernndez waved wildly from the balcony of her home in Buenos Aires, where the former president is serving a six-year sentence under house arrest, to massive crowds of supporters celebrating in the streets below. Despite being barred from politics for life, she remains the most influential leader of Peronism, an ideologically flexible populist movement focused on labor rights that emerged in the 1940s from Buenos Aires province and dominated politics for decades.Fernndez gloated over Mileis agonies on social media, arguing that the bribery scandal engulfing the presidents powerful sister would prove lethal for his electoral prospects.And I wont even start on how the rest (those who still have jobs) are doing. Burdened with debt for food, rent, utilities or medications, and on top of that, with maxed-out credit cards, she added. The electoral results also cast a spotlight on Fernndezs former protege, Axel Kicillof, the left-wing governor of Buenos Aires province and one of Mileis fiercest critics, revealing him as best positioned to take up the mantle of future Peronist leadership. Kicillof gave an ebullient speech late Sunday in which he rebuked Milei and reminded voters what theyve lost by swapping Peronist populism for Mileis brutal spending cuts. The ballot boxes told Milei that public works cannot be halted. They explained to him that retirees cannot be beaten, that people with disabilities cannot be abandoned, he told cheering supporters.The ballot boxes shouted that education, healthcare, science and culture cannot be defunded. ISABEL DEBRE DeBre writes about Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay for The Associated Press, based in Buenos Aires. Before moving to South America in 2024, she covered the Middle East reporting from Jerusalem, Cairo and Dubai. twitter mailto
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  • NEWSISOUT.COM
    New report: We are everywhere Our LGBTQ+ media are not
    A popular 1980s slogan in the LGBTQ+ community was We are everywhere. We truly are part of every profession, every race, gender, class, religion, and more.Just as other communities have media outlets that take a by us, for us approach to news and information, there has been a gay press in fits and starts going all the way back to 1924, when a U.S. postal worker named Henry Gerber and his pals launched Friendship & Freedom in Chicago. The police arrested Gerber and shut the newsletter down.More than 100 years later, the state of LGBTQ+ media might be better than what Gerber experienced, but due to discrimination and political headwinds including corporate backsliding on diversity marketing there is a struggle to serve the community with strong local LGBTQ+ journalism.Which is why I set out in late 2024 to start to document the current state of local LGBTQ+ media in the U.S. Thanks to a grant from the MacArthur Foundation, The LGBTQ+ Media Mapping Project, hubbed at the News is Out collaborative sponsored by the Local Media Foundation, is now available. With a map developed by City University of New Yorks Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism Center for Community Media, we have a better sense of the strengths and weaknesses facing this niche within the media world.Tracy BaimWhile I had published a book on LGBTQ+ media several years ago (Gay Press, Gay Power), I still was not prepared for just how precarious this media ecosystem is today. Our report found 18 states with no LGBTQ+ media and that many city-based media are unable to cover their entire states. Millions of people have no local LGBTQ+ media coverage.During focus groups, we asked the publishers and editors just what needs they have, beyond an obvious infusion of cash. They are seeking to diversify their revenues, to adapt to new technologies, grow their audiences, and to better serve neighboring communities. There are a wide range of recommendations in the report, things the outlets themselves see could be valuable.Philanthropy has barely stepped into this part of the media universe in part because almost all LGBTQ+ media, both local and national outlets surveyed, are for-profit. But now that more funders see a need to support local for-profit media, this could open up an opportunity to support more of these outlets. Given the political backlash against the community, now is not the time to push these businesses to become non-profit, as that could be a new single-point failure.Our report also found that during this time of crisis, there has been a surge in audience, and more willingness to work together. The participants in this research indicated a strong willingness to collaborate across both business and editorial opportunities. But such efforts require an investment of both time and money. Support is needed.We surveyed both legendary local LGBTQ+ newspapers and newer online outlets. More research should be done on the creator/influencer world, which includes many LGBTQ+ people. And while local LGBTQ+ media was the primary focus of this research, we did survey national LGBTQ+ media. I was surprised how precarious many of these outlets are as well.The entire LGBTQ+ media universe could use a strategic plan and an infusion of new resources, which I hope funders will step up to support.In the meantime, readers can support LGBTQ+ media by signing up for their newsletters, and donating or subscribing if they have those options.Please see the report for a full slate of recommendations, here: https://newsisout.com/lgbtq-media-mapping/. The map is hosted on the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism website here: https://lgbtqmediamap.journalism.cuny.edu/ . We will update the map as new outlets are found; indeed, we have already added new dots to the map.Tracy Baim is the co-author of The LGBTQ+ Media Mapping Project report with Hanna Siemaszko. She is the co-founder of the 40-year-old Windy City Times LGBTQ+ newspaper, and is the executive director of Press Forward Chicago, a journalism pooled fund part of the national Press Forward movement.The post New report: We are everywhere Our LGBTQ+ media are not appeared first on News Is Out.
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  • WWW.ESPN.COM
    Transfer rumors, news: Real Madrid eye Konate, Upamecano as free agents
    Real Madrid are looking at Bayern Munich's Dayot Upamecano and Liverpool's Ibrahima Konat. Transfer Talk has the latest news, gossip and rumors.
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  • WWW.PRIDE.COM
    How the public has been taught to fear trans people
    As of summer 2025, it appears that there are few things that the American political system cares about more than "gender ideology."Just 9 months into the year, state legislatures have considered more than 953 anti-trans bills, 116 of which are now law. In one of his very first actions following his inauguration, President Trump signed an executive order titled "Defending Women from Gender Ideology Extremism and Restoring Biological Truth to the Federal Government." He has since issued six more executive orders that target, dehumanize, and deny the existence of queer and trans people.In June, the US Supreme Court decided Skrmetti v. the United States and Mahmoud v. Taylor, two cases that systematically undermine youth access to gender affirming care and exposure to LGBTQ+ content in schools, respectively.From local politicians to Supreme Court justices, there's an obsession with eradicating "gender ideology" from this country. As a trans, non-binary person myself, I frequently find myself asking, 'How did we get here?' This summer, I've worked to investigate why.As an intern with the Southern Equality Research & Policy Center, I've researched the anti-trans movement: where it originated, how it operates, and what anti-trans advocates care most about. Perhaps even more importantly, I've sought to understand where the general public stands: what hesitation do everyday people have when it comes to trans people, and why?The answer is alarmingly simple: increasingly over the last several years, anti-trans advocates have worked incessantly to create confusion and promote panic. In fact, most of the rhetoric used to undermine trans existence, from child exposure to women's restrooms, is based on an exaggerated reality if not pure fiction.Indeed, as children are the most vulnerable members of our society, moral panics often center on what may or may not harm our youth. This is undoubtedly the case here, as many are concerned that trans acceptance will confuse the children. Consequently, youth access to gender affirming care and LGBTQ+ inclusive content in schools has been made into the front lines of this anti-trans culture war.However, though far-right pundits and politicians may equate the two, understanding is not indoctrination. Rather, introducing children to media with transgender characters does the bare minimum to challenge hate and promote acceptance. Children are not transitioning for the sake of it; learning new concepts and terms simply gives more people the vocabulary to describe their experiences.Why would they when being trans especially being a young trans person is one of the most dangerous things to be right now?Among other measures, most trans kids 61%, as of a 2021 study face relentless bullying, notably more so than both their LGB and straight cisgender peers. Increasingly, some trans kids and teens even face the vitriol of far-right influencers and their followers, exposing them to a whole new level of bullying.No parent, teacher, doctor, or drag queen is trying to convince children to transition. We are merely hoping to show kids and teens that they are loved for exactly who they are. This includes tomboys, gay kids, boyish boys, and girly girls, all alongside trans kids.There is also a widespread impression that trans rights fundamentally conflict with or even supersede the rights of others. This argument is most commonly used in defense of women's rights and single-sex spaces, and some members of the LGB community believe that the trans rights movement has threatened gay rights. However, if you look at the facts, it's clear that trans rights pose no threat to women's rights or safety. There is no evidence that cisgender women experience heightened safety risks when transgender people use public facilities that align with their gender identity. Instead, transgender people are the ones who face harassment and violence in bathrooms, particularly when forced to use facilities according to their sex assigned at birth.Similarly, trans women are not a danger to women's and girls' sports. Issues of fairness at the professional level can be mitigated by hormone requirements, and transgender girls have zero physical advantage over their cisgender counterparts before puberty. In a 2024 study, trans women athletes were even found to have notable disadvantages when compared to their cisgender female counterparts.Some also believe that the trans rights movement pushed the public too far, sparked far-right outrage, and endangered gay (LGB) rights.Fewer Americans indeed support gay rights now than a handful of years ago. However, this is not because the trans rights movement asked for too much. As reported on by scholars, journalists, and activists, the current backlash to LGB and transgender rights is the result of a highly coordinated and deliberate far-right movement that has worked since the 1990s to suppress pro- feminist, gay, and trans advocacy.Trans people did not suddenly ask for too much the Republicans just needed a new way to galvanize their base following the 2022 midterms, particularly after the controversy of Dobbs. We shouldn't tolerate this blatant attempt to tear the LGBTQ+ community apart. We should not sacrifice our transgender and gender non-conforming siblings for the sake of palatability and assimilation.Contrary to what conservatives would have us believe, we can expand the table we can even break down the walls instead of fighting over the seats.Lastly, many hesitate to fight alongside pro-trans advocates and politicians due to the widespread belief that we suppress dissenting voices and diversity of opinion. Indeed, our society has become more polarized at every level. As a result, it's easy to see those who disagree with us as inherently opposed to our existence and experiences. It's easy to demand unity of viewpoints, to demonize anyone who disagrees with the movement. It's even easier to believe that you'll be the one cast out.Cancel culture eats at a functioning society. It constructs costly barriers to human connection and divides us into irreconcilable camps. It's actively harmful to the progressive movement to demand political perfection from anyone. However, it is deadly for critics to paint the pro-trans movement as dominant or oppressive.The pro-trans movement is losing in many ways. In just nine months, legislators have authored almost 1,000 pieces of legislation, all to target less than 2% of the population. How can you consider that and emerge thinking that transgender people have any significant political power?People do not gain political capital through transitioning. Instead, they lose it. Trans people do not have better job prospects or a higher income than you. Study after study has shown that transgender people are disproportionately likely to be impoverished and unemployed. Transgender people certainly do not have any power over the media, as both mainstream and social media sites have spent years platforming those who argue that we are confused, malicious, and undeserving of respect.So what do trans people really want? The answer is simple: to have the ability to define our individual experience of gender for ourselves. To eliminate societal restrictions on what a person can or cannot do because of their gender.As a society, we have let our fear of change drive us towards hate. Instead, let your confusion drive you towards curiosity. I hope you seek out your trans neighbors and have them over for a cup of coffee. Please bring your earnest questions to them and ask them to help you understand. To my trans and gender non-conforming readers, I hope you approach questions with grace.We cannot afford division any longer. Let's seek community instead.Perspectives is dedicated to featuring a wide range of inspiring personal stories and impactful opinions from the LGBTQ+ community and its allies. Visit Pride.com/submit to learn more about submission guidelines. Views expressed in Perspectives stories are those of the guest writers, columnists, and editors, and do not directly represent the views of PRIDE or our parent company, equalpride.
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  • WWW.PROPUBLICA.ORG
    The Untold Saga of What Happened When DOGE Stormed Social Security
    by Eli Hager ProPublica is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to receive our biggest stories as soon as theyre published. On Feb. 10, on the third floor of the Social Security Administrations Baltimore-area headquarters, Leland Dudek unfurled a 4-foot-wide roll of paper that extended to 20 feet in length. It was a visual guide that the agency had kept for years to explain Social Securitys many technological systems and processes. The paper was covered in flow charts, arrows and text so minuscule you almost needed a magnifying glass to read it. Dudek called it Social Securitys Dead Sea Scroll.Dudek and a fellow Social Security Administration bureaucrat taped the scroll across a wall of a windowless executive office. This was where a team from the new Department of Government Efficiency was going to set up shop.DOGE was already terrifying the federal bureaucracy with the prospect of mass job loss and intrusions into previously sacrosanct databases. Still, Dudek and a handful of his tech-oriented colleagues were hopeful: If any agency needed a dose of efficiency, it was theirs. There was kind of an excitement, actually, a longtime top agency official said. Id spent 29 years trying to use technology and data in ways that the agency would never get around to.The Social Security Administration is 90 years old. Even today, thousands of its physical records are stored in former limestone mines in Missouri and Pennsylvania. Its core software dates back to the early 1980s, and only a few programmers remain who understand the intricacies of its more than 60 million lines of code. The agency has been talking about switching from paper Social Security cards to electronic ones for two decades, without making it happen.DOGE, billed as a squad of crack technologists, seemed perfectly designed to overcome such obstacles. And its young members were initially inquisitive about how Social Security worked and what most needed fixing. Several times over those first few days, Akash Bobba, a 21-year-old coder whod been the first of them to arrive, held his face close to Dudeks scroll, tracing connections between the agencys venerable IT systems with his index finger. Bobba asked: Who would know about this part of the architecture?Before long, though, he and the other DOGErs buried their heads in their laptops and plugged in their headphones. Their senior leaders had already written out goals on a whiteboard. At the top: Find fraud. Quickly.Dudeks scroll was forgotten. The heavy paper started to unpeel from the wall, and it eventually sagged to the floor. It only got worse from there, said Dudek, who would improbably be named acting commissioner of the Social Security Administration, a position he held through May. In 15 hours of interviews with ProPublica, Dudek described the chaos of working with DOGE and how he tried first to collaborate, and then to protect the agency, resulting in turns that were at various times alarming, confounding and tragicomic.DOGE, he said, began acting like a bunch of people who didnt know what they were doing, with ideas of how government should run thinking it should work like a McDonalds or a bank screaming all the time.The shock troops of DOGE, at the Social Security Administration and myriad other federal agencies, were the advance guard in perhaps the most dramatic transformation of the U.S. government since the New Deal. And despite the highly public departure of DOGEs leader, Elon Musk, that campaign continues today. Key DOGE team members have transitioned to permanent jobs at the SSA, including as the agencys top technology officials. The 19-year-old whose self-anointed moniker Big Balls has made him one of the most memorable DOGErs joined the agency this summer.The DOGE philosophy has been embraced by the SSAs commissioner, Frank Bisignano, who was confirmed by the Senate in May. Your bias has to be because mine is that DOGE is helping make things better, Bisignano told senior officials weeks after replacing Dudek, according to a recording obtained by ProPublica. It may not feel that way, but dont believe everything you read.In a statement, a Social Security Administration spokesperson said that Bisignano has made notable initial progress and that the initiatives underway will continue to strengthen service delivery and enhance the integrity and efficiency of our systems. The statement asserted that under President Trumps leadership and his commitment to protect and preserve Social Security, Commissioner Bisignano is strengthening Social Security and the programs it provides for Americans now and in the future.For all the controversy DOGE has generated, its time at the Social Security Administration has not amounted to looming armageddon, as some Democrats warn. What its been, as much as anything, is a missed opportunity, according to interviews with more than 35 current or recently departed Social Security officials and staff, who spoke on the condition of anonymity mostly out of fear of retaliation by the Trump administration, and a review of hundreds of pages of internal documents, emails and court records.The DOGE team, and Bisignano, have prioritized scoring quick wins that allow them to post triumphant tweets and press releases especially, in the early months, about an essentially nonexistent form of fraud while squandering the chance for systemic change at an agency that genuinely needs it.They could have worked to modernize Social Securitys legacy software, the current and former staffers say. They could have tried to streamline the stupefying volume of documentation that many Social Security beneficiaries have to provide. They could have built search tools to help staff navigate the agencys 60,000 pages of policies. (New hires often need at least three years to master the nuances of even one type of case.) They could have done something about wait times for disability claims and appeals, which often take over a year.They did none of these things.Ultimately, no one had a more complete view of the missed opportunity than Lee Dudek. A 48-year-old with a shaved pate and a broad build that suggests an aging former linebacker, Dudek is a figure seemingly native to the universe of President Donald Trump an unlikely holder of a key post, elevated after little or no vetting, who briefly attains notoriety in Washington circles before vanishing into obscurity not unlike Anthony Scaramucci in the first Trump administration.Dudek, a midlevel bureaucrat with blunt confidence and a preference for his own ideas, had failed in his one past attempt to manage a small team within the SSA, leading him and his supervisors to conclude he shouldnt oversee others. Despite that, Trump made him the boss of 57,500 people as acting commissioner of the agency this spring.Dudek got the job, wittingly or not, through an end-run around his bosses. After Trump won the 2024 election and rumors of a cost-cutting-and-efficiency SWAT team began to swirl, Dudek asked people he knew at big tech companies for introductions to potential DOGE members. In December, a contact set him up with Musks right-hand man, Steve Davis, which led to conversations with other DOGE figures about how they could hack Social Securitys bureaucracy to get to yes, Dudek said.By February, Dudek had become the conduit between DOGE and the SSA, alerting top agency officials that DOGE wanted to work at headquarters. And unlike Michelle King, the acting agency chief at the time, Dudek was willing to speed up the new-hire training process to give DOGE access to virtually all of the SSAs databases. This precipitated a sequence of events that began with him being placed on administrative leave, where he wrote a LinkedIn post that propelled him into the public eye for the first time: I confess, he posted. I helped DOGE understand SSA. I confess. I circumvented the chain of command to connect DOGE with the people who get stuff done. The same weekend, King resigned and Dudek, who was at home in his underwear watching MSNBC, got an email stating that the president of the United States had appointed him commissioner.Between February and May, when Dudeks tenure ended, his erratic rhetoric and decisions routinely made front-page news. He was often portrayed as a DOGE patsy, perhaps even a fool. But in his interviews with ProPublica this summer, he revealed himself to be a much more complex figure, a disappointed believer in DOGEs potential, who maintains he did what he could to protect Social Securitys mission under duress.Dudek is the first agency head to speak in detail on the record about what it is like to be thrust into such an important position under Trump. He told ProPublica that he decided to speak because he wishes that those who govern would have more frank and honest conversations with the public.To the 73 million Americans whose financial lives depend on the viability of Social Security, those first months were a seesaw of apprehension and rumor. Inside the agency, Dudek, ill-prepared for leadership or for DOGEs murky agenda, was stumbling through the chaos in part by creating some of his own. Leland Dudek, former acting commissioner of the Social Security Administration, at home this summer after leaving the government. Im growing out my hair and dropping weight, he said. It helps when you live in a federal community where youre hated. (Rosen Morton for ProPublica) Dudek knows what its like to depend on Social Security. When he was a kid in Saginaw, Michigan, his mother turned to Social Security disability benefits to support him and his siblings after she got injured at a Ford-affiliated parts factory; she also had a mental-health breakdown. (Dudeks now-deceased father, who worked for General Motors, was alternately abusive and absent, according to the family.)At school, Dudek was isolated and bullied for being poor, his sister told ProPublica, and hes had an underdogs quick temper ever since. But he was always an advanced student, and he developed an early interest in computer science and politics. As a teenager, he often watched C-Span. He was fascinated, he said, by how government worked and how it could change peoples lives.Dudek arrived in Washington in 1995 to attend Catholic University of America. He was the type of earnest young man who was enthralled by President Bill Clintons campaign at the time to reinvent government by injecting it with private sector-style efficiency, much as Trump and DOGE later said they would.In college, he also displayed the tendency to buck authority that would mark his professional career. He had a night job running the universitys computer labs; if there were problems, he was supposed to call his boss. He wasnt supposed to install new software on all the computers, but thats what he did. It worked, although he got a talking-to about knowing his role.After graduating, Dudek spent nearly a decade working for tech companies that contracted with the federal government on modernization projects, before migrating to several jobs within federal agencies themselves.In 2009, he arrived at the Social Security Administration as an IT security official. The agency was just like the Saginaw hed run from, Dudek said: an insular, hidebound place where everyone knew everyone and they all thought innovation would cost them their jobs.But the SSA wasnt the only institution at fault. Congress had enacted byzantine eligibility requirements for disability and Supplemental Security Income benefits, forcing the agency to expend huge amounts of time and money running those programs. At the same time, lawmakers had capped the agencys administrative funding just as tens of millions of Baby Boomers were aging into retirement, exploding Social Securitys rolls. (The SSA is now at its lowest staffing level in a half-century, even as it has taken on 40 million more beneficiaries.)Because of the SSAs stultifying culture, Dudek said, he leaned into his insubordinate streak. He had the sense that he could do it better, and when he felt like his proposals werent receiving money or attention, he went around his superiors. In one instance, he approached potential partners at credit card companies, hoping they would like his ideas for combating fraud and would relay those ideas to the Social Security commissioner at the time. Certainly from an internal perspective within SSA, certainly from a congressional perspective, I was violating rules, Dudek said.In part because of moves like this, Dudek got reassigned within the agency several times. Over the years, he was given multiple roles as a senior adviser, a title he said is for federal employees who are either incompetent but too established to fire or highly competent in a technical way but lacking in management or people skills.Dudek was stubborn. He could come off as a know-it-all, and he tended to ramble when speaking. But he is also thoughtful and well read. In our interviews, he brought up everything from the origins of the concept of Social Security among sociologists and psychologists in the Depression era to the bureaucrats who were left behind in faraway places after the decline of the British Empire. He repeatedly cited James Q. Wilsons seminal 1989 book, Bureaucracy, which spills considerable ink on the inefficiencies of the Social Security Administration and on a businessman named Donald J. Trump who supposedly knew how to cut through red tape to get building projects done. (No such law constrained Trump, Wilson wrote.) Dudek, whose bookshelves are pictured, has long immersed himself in everything from the decline of the British Empire to the long-running bureaucratic inefficiencies of the Social Security Administration. (Rosem Morton for ProPublica) Dudek had been a lifelong Democrat and voted for Kamala Harris. But, like some other liberals, he was becoming exasperated with the administrative state and special-interest groups, including corporations, unions and social-justice organizations, that capture government and stifle reform. If it took Trump to cut through that, Dudek was open-minded. The world has changed, he scribbled in a note to himself. We must change with it.Immediately after Dudek became commissioner in February, he got a call from Scott Coulter, a hedge fund manager with a $12 million Manhattan apartment whod been picked to lead DOGEs team at Social Security. Were coming, Coulter said. Be prepared.DOGE arrived ready to embark on a specific mission: Its operatives at the Treasury Department had seen data suggesting that the Social Security Administration wasnt keeping its death records up to date. They thought they saw signs of fraudulent payments. Musk was very, very interested.Dudek wasnt initially concerned about this focus, which he and his colleagues viewed as misguided. To him, the young coders were nerdy outsiders just like hed once been, albeit ones from privileged Ivy League and Silicon Valley backgrounds. They reminded me of myself when I first got into computers, he said. He thought he could mold them.In particular, Dudek liked Bobba, who had a gentle air and a thick pile of dark hair that covered his forehead. Dudek had spent hours with Bobba, trying to get him to focus on concrete problems like how beneficiaries records were stored, often as cumbersome PDF and image files. Instead, Bobba, who did not respond to a request for comment, prioritized Musks quest to prove that dead people were receiving Social Security benefits. Akash Bobba (via Gitlab profile) Bobba had completed high school in New Jersey just three and a half years earlier. As a class speaker at his graduation, hed encouraged his classmates not to ignore nuance and complexity. Hed lamented the increasing willingness to simplify even the most complex narratives into sensational tidbits like 280-character tweets, which perpetuates misinformation.Yet Dudek had barely settled in as commissioner when Bobba unintentionally sparked a national misinformation firestorm: A table he created appeared as a screenshot in a grossly misleading Musk tweet about vampires over the age of 100 allegedly collecting Social Security checks. Bobba had sorted people with a Social Security number by age and found more than 12 million over 120 years old still listed in the agencys data.Bobba said he knew these people werent actually receiving benefits and tried to tell Musk so, to no avail, according to SSA officials. Dudek watched in horror as Trump then shared the same statistics with both houses of Congress and a national television audience, claiming the numbers proved shocking levels of incompetence and probable fraud in the Social Security program for our seniors. (The White House declined to comment on this episode. Bisignano, the new SSA commissioner, has repeatedly said that the work that DOGE did was 100% accurate.)Inside the SSA, the DOGE team tried to find proof of the fraud that Musk and Trump had proclaimed, but it didnt seem to know how to go about it, jumping from tactic to tactic. It was a maelstrom of topic A to topic G to topic C to topic Q, said a senior SSA official who was in the room. Were we still helping anything by explaining stuff? the official said. It really wasnt clear by that point.Dudek began to realize that the problem wasnt primarily the people he called the DOGE kids. It was the senior leaders who were issuing orders without heeding what the young DOGErs were learning.Dudek was perhaps the most favorably disposed to the outsiders. Plenty of agency officials were already put off by the DOGErs, who often issued peremptory orders to meet with them and answer questions.Michelle Kowalski, an analyst who has since departed the agency, was instructed to take one of the DOGE people, Cole Killian, through earnings data and historical records to analyze the cases of extremely old people whose deaths had not been recorded in Social Security data. She found herself having to explain to him, again and again, that many of these people were born before states reported births and deaths to the federal government and decades before the advent of electronic record keeping. In the early days of the agency, some people didnt even know their birthdays.Kowalski had assumed that Killian was middle-aged, since he was issuing instructions to her team. But he usually kept his camera turned off during video meetings. When he finally turned it on for one call, the face she saw seemed like that of a teenager.Killian was actually 24, just six years removed from performing Hotel California at his high school talent show at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School outside of Boston. (Killian, whose DOGE responsibilities also involved work at the Environmental Protection Agency, did not respond to a request for comment from ProPublica.) Cole Killian (via McGill Artificial Intelligence Society 2021-2022 Team Page) Kowalski was exasperated by having to answer to such inexperience, even as so many of her colleagues were being pushed out the door by the Trump administration. She was not alone.Many of us had actually believed in the marketed idea of genius technologists coming in to make things work better, one senior SSA official said. But DOGE ended up being more interested, the official said, in trying to prove that the Social Security Administration was entirely incompetent than in suggesting improvements.Employees at headquarters took their time walking past the glass-walled conference room where DOGE staffers had set up, glaring in at them as they worked among stacks of laptops that they used for assignments at different agencies. On a blog popular among SSA staffers, the mood in the comments section turned dark, with some anonymous posters identifying where in the building the incel DOGE boys were located and saying that they are just warming up just think what will come next.Dudek sensed the growing tension. He felt it, too. Hed been getting anonymous death threats mailed to his house. He decided to move the DOGE operatives to a more secluded area of the campus and assigned an armed security detail to protect them. The Social Security Administration building where DOGE initially operated. As hostility mounted toward the outsiders, Dudek who was receiving death threats himself moved the DOGE team to a more secluded area of the campus and assigned armed security to protect them. (Rosem Morton for ProPublica) During his first month as commissioner, Dudek ran his executive meetings in bombastic fashion, as if he were Trump on The Apprentice. And he sent out insulting full-staff emails pressuring career employees to retire. (Some 5,500 have left, with 1,500 more expected to follow.)Dudek says this behavior stemmed partly from being in over his head, amazed by who he was suddenly answering to. When the president of the United States asks you to do stuff, he said, you get caught up.But he also claims he was just performing a role. Early on, I put on a persona of a yeller, Dudek said. (Multiple longtime colleagues and friends noticed the change, they told ProPublica. As one put it, Theres Lee, and then theres Leland-performingly-Dudek.)This, he hoped, would convince the White House and DOGE of his commitment, which could in turn give him credibility as he kept trying to push them toward the real issues at Social Security.But the Trump administration kept having other plans. Its demands usually came through Coulter, the DOGE lead with the Harvard and hedge fund background, who early on dropped by Dudeks office unannounced multiple times a week, Dudek said.I really think it would be helpful if you were to do this tomorrow, Coulter would say to Dudek about eliminating an entire division of the SSA or cutting more staff, according to Dudek. To him, these suggestions felt like orders. If he responded, I dont know, let me think about it, Coulter would call a few hours later on the encrypted-messaging app Signal to ask, You really arent catching on, are you? and Do you know how many times Ive defended you?I was supposed to get the message and it would be my own decision, so Id be stuck with it, Dudek said. He can say he never told me to do anything. (Coulter, who has been working for DOGE at NASA in recent months, did not respond to a request for comment.) Scott Coulter (via LinkedIn profile) One of Coulters suggestions involved the SSAs Office of Transformation, which had been doing the seemingly DOGE-like work of developing an online application to replace many of the agencys paper-based forms and in-person interviews. The office had been working with elderly, low-income and disabled people to see what most confused them about SSA processes and what would most help them if these were redesigned.But instead of facilitating this effort at greater efficiency, Coulter told Dudek to close the office, according to Dudek, claiming it was wasteful. Agency staff joked that DOGE shut it down because its name included a word that began with trans.Dudek and his colleagues sometimes attempted to co-opt DOGEs obsessions in the hope that they could address a genuine problem at the agency. This strategy was not successful.Such was the case with the issue of phone fraud. Knowing that the DOGErs would perk up at the mention of anything fraud-related, Dudek and other officials made a point of explaining that theyd been working on an initiative to block bots that had been calling the agency. The bots would impersonate beneficiaries, using dates of birth and other information that can be found on the internet, to try to change the beneficiaries bank-routing information and steal their benefits.In 2024, Dudek had been on a team that spearheaded an effort to combat this type of fraud. The plans included running all phone-based requests for bank account changes against a Treasury Department database of suspicious accounts and analyzing such calls to verify whether they were being made from the vicinity of the address on file of the person purportedly calling.DOGE ignored the proposed solutions. Instead, the White House instructed Dudek to end all claims and direct-deposit transactions by phone. Beneficiaries would have to verify their own identities by using an often-confusing web portal or by traveling to a field office to do it in person. For millions of elderly or disabled people, these were daunting or impossible options.When this policy was rolled out at the end of March, beneficiaries panicked. Many flocked to field offices to preemptively provide proof of their identities even when they didnt need to. Panicked Social Security beneficiaries flocked to Social Security field offices, like this one in Baltimore, as the agencys policies on making claims by phone repeatedly zigzagged this spring. (Rosem Morton for ProPublica) Back at headquarters, in a weekly staff meeting, Dudek asked who could jump on the increasingly urgent task of making it easier to schedule field office appointments via the SSA website. Well, Lee, you just fired that team, one official answered, referring to the Office of Transformation. (Dudek said he asked this question on purpose to make sure DOGE heard the answer.)Over the course of six weeks under Dudek, the phone policy zigged and zagged a half dozen times for example, the SSA adopted, then abandoned, a three-day waiting period to conduct an algorithmic fraud check on all calls before finally ending up nearly where it began. Transactions could be carried out by phone again.Throughout this saga, Dudek was still getting calls from White House officials most often from Katie Miller, DOGEs spokesperson and the wife of Stephen Miller, one of Trumps closest advisers. (Katie Miller went on to work for Musk before announcing plans to launch her own podcast. She did not respond to a request for comment.) Miller often called well into the evening, Dudek said, to chastise him about anything the press had reported that day that had caught the administration off guard. Dudek said Katie Miller, who was DOGEs spokesperson early on, would call to chastise him about anything the press reported that had caught the administration off guard. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images) As Dudek restored the phone policy to its pre-Trump version, Miller got angrier. You changed the presidents policy, she said, according to Dudek.Im like, No, Im still with the presidents policy, Dudek told Miller. But, if Social Security officials could implement the anti-fraud measures that he and his team had previously been planning, he said, they could achieve the same end. In that case, Dudek said, we will do so and ease the friction point on the public.How dare you, Miller said.Increasingly dismayed, Dudek hatched a plan that seemed to embody his mix of good intentions, hubris and melodrama. He decided he would continue to play along with DOGE on the surface, in part so that Coulter and the other bigwigs would think he was still handling their business and thus spend less time at the agency. The younger DOGE team members, he said, were easier to work with when their masters werent around.But behind the scenes, he began to undermine DOGE however he could. Sometimes he did this by making intemperate statements that he knew would find their way into the press and draw attention to what DOGE was asking him to do. Have you ever worked with someone whos manic-depressive? he said of the Trump administrations leadership in one meeting.Other times Dudek himself was the leaker. As commissioner, he was often an anonymous source for articles in The Washington Post and The New York Times. If it was stupid stuff from the DOGE team, a lot of times I would go out to the press and immediately tattletale on myself so that it would blow up the next day, Dudek said, adding that he did this in part to help Social Security advocates understand and bring attention to the growing crisis at the agency.Rebecca Vallas, CEO of the nonprofit National Academy of Social Insurance, said she was in a one-on-one meeting with Dudek in March when he started getting calls from DOGE officials and the media. The calls were about his recent public comments claiming he might have to shut down the entire Social Security Administration if a federal judge continued to deny DOGE access to sensitive Social Security data. He just let me sit there with the volume up high, Vallas said.On one of the calls, she said, someone told Dudek, Elon loved that, but now its time to walk it back. Afterward, Dudek told her, I dont know how we get out of this without hurting huge numbers of people. Im just trying to give advocates some ammunition.Dudeks strategy was easier to pull off without DOGE catching on if it came off as the blundering of an amateur, he told ProPublica. In the most striking example, DOGE instructed Dudek to cancel two contracts that the SSA had with the state of Maine, according to Dudek and other SSA officials. The contracts, which all 50 states have long had versions of, allowed Maine to automatically report births and deaths to Social Security. Canceling them would impede government efficiency: Births and deaths in the state would take weeks or months longer to enter the federal system. That would likely cause benefits to continue to be sent to thousands of Mainers after theyve died, exactly the kind of thing that Trump and Musk had been railing against.It seemed clear to Dudek that he was being told to do this only because Trump was publicly feuding with Maines governor about transgender athletes. (The White House declined to comment on this episode.) So he decided to write the hell out of an email directing that the contracts be canceled. He did so in a way he thought would still earn him points with Trump and DOGE but that would, simultaneously, be so inflammatory that it would create a major storyline for reporters, advocates and Congress.Please cancel the contracts, Dudeks email read. While our improper payments will go up, and fraudsters may compromise identities, no money will go from the public trust to a petulant child. That last phrase referred to Maines governor, Janet Mills, the one Trump had been fighting with. (Do I care about Janet Mills? No, Dudek told ProPublica.)As Dudek had hoped, the press attention he generated compelled him to do what he already wanted to do: reinstate the contracts. In a written apology, he explained that he was only belatedly realizing the potential harm of what he (alone) had done. I screwed up, he told reporters. Im new at this job.Once again, Miller called Dudek and excoriated him. What the hell is going on? she said.This place leaks like a sieve, he answered. What can I tell you?Looking back on his tenure, Dudek maintains that his three months working alongside DOGE were not as harmful as they could have been, especially compared with what happened this spring at other federal agencies, some of which were essentially vaporized. Social Security checks, he points out, are still going out the door.Still, the SSA is reduced in his wake, with thousands fewer staff members to process claims and improve systems. These departed employees were disproportionately experienced and knowledgeable; they were the ones able to get other jobs or to retire with a pension. They took a lot of know-how with them.And the emotional harm that DOGE caused to older people and to people with disabilities worsened by Dudeks confusing actions lingers. Many of these people have had money taken out of their paychecks their entire careers to pay for something more than just retirement benefits: security. Its a feeling that may now be lost to them forever.Indeed, DOGE and Dudek caused so much consternation about the stability of the system that hundreds of thousands of people have filed early for retirement in recent months, even though doing so is not financially wise in the long term. The SSA must now pay out more in benefits than expected, contrary to DOGEs cost-saving mission.Dudeks sister back in Saginaw, Ana Dudek, relies on Social Security disability benefits. I would talk to my brother when he was commissioner and be like, dude, the decisions youre making are causing people to feel terror, she said. Terror is an apt descriptor.Dudek acknowledges much of this. Im not a cold, callous son of a bitch, I really do get it, he said. Ill forever be associated with the pain of DOGE. But so much went on in such a short amount of time. I tried to make the best decisions I could given the circumstances.Since being dismissed from the agency in June, Dudek has been struggling to find another job. My name is mud, he said. It is as if I no longer exist.As a former SSA colleague put it, Dudeks story is the story of a disposable pawn, and theres lots of those under Trump. They just used him, and then they disposed of him.The White House, presented with extensive questions for this article, sent a one-paragraph statement disparaging ProPublica and Dudek. ProPublicas story, White House spokesperson Davis Ingle said, is largely based around the comments of a disgruntled former employee who openly admitted to leaking to the media, manipulating his colleagues, and repeatedly telling lies from his official position. On his last day as Acting Commissioner, Leland Dudek showered praise upon President Trump in an op-ed and touted the real results of the Social Security Administration, but now that hes bitter about being out of the top job hes singing a different tune.Dudek said the administration asked him to write the op-ed and then vetted it. Referring to the litany of extravagant praise that cabinet secretaries lavished on Trump recently, he said, you saw the cabinet meeting.Bisignano, the Social Security commissioner, comes to the role with a very different professional background than Dudek (though, like Dudek, he has working-class roots, in his case in Brooklyn). Until this job, Bisignano, 66, spent his career in the private sector. He was a top executive in operations and technology at massive banks like Citigroup and JPMorganChase and went on to become CEO of the payment processor Fiserv. Frank Bisignano, in the oval office with President Donald Trump, was confirmed as commissioner of the Social Security Administration in May. He has presented a calmer public face than Dudek while embracing DOGEs philosophy. (Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post/Getty Images) Yet, like DOGE, he appears to have embraced the appearance of efficiency rather than efficiency itself. He has repeatedly told staff that Social Security should be run more like Amazon, with AI handling more customer interactions. But disability claims are more complicated than ordering toothpaste, according to SSA officials and experts, and Social Securitys customer base is older and more likely to have an intellectual disability than the average Amazon Prime member.Bisignano has also fixated on how much time it takes to reach an agent on the SSAs 800 number. In a July press release, he claimed that the average was down to six minutes, an 80% reduction from 2024. He achieved this in part by reassigning 1,000 field office employees to phone duty. That means initial calls are getting answered faster, but there are significantly fewer staff members available to handle complex, in-person cases. And reaching an agent turns out to mean speaking to a human being or an AI bot. Internal SSA statistics obtained by ProPublica reveal that Bisignanos estimate treats cases in which beneficiaries interact with a chatbot and opt for a callback as zero-minute waits, skewing the average. If you actually stay on the line, USA Today has found, it often takes over an hour to reach a live representative.In its statement, the SSA reiterated that call wait times have dramatically improved and that using technology on our national 800 number has enabled 90 percent of calls handled to be served via automated self-service options or convenient callbacks.Even the latest phone fraud policy feels like a rerun from DOGEs earlier season. In late July, Bisignanos team quietly posted a document to the Office of Management and Budget website stating that 3.4 million more people would have to go into field offices to verify their identities instead of being able to do so by phone, starting Aug. 18. Days later, the SSA announced that this was actually optional.The DOGE era may officially be over at the agency, but the approach, it seems, is the same. As one SSA official put it, Bisignano is doing all the same fundamentally inefficient things, more efficiently. Alex Mierjeski contributed research.
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