Get Out The Vote!!!
@getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
14K followers 19K following 1K posts
#GOTV
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Supreme Court won’t hear Ghislaine Maxwell sex-trafficking conviction appeal
Supreme Court won’t hear Ghislaine Maxwell sex-trafficking conviction appeal
The Supreme Court on Monday declined to consider throwing out the 2021 sex-trafficking conviction of Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime associate of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence after she was found guilty of conspiring with and aiding Epstein in his sexual abuse of underage girls. She was thrust back into the spotlight this summer as the Trump administration faced intense pressure to release new information about the decadelong scheme. “We’re, of course, deeply disappointed that the Supreme Court declined to hear Ghislaine Maxwell’s case. But this fight isn’t over,” David Oscar Markus, Maxwell’s lawyer, said in a statement. “Serious legal and factual issues remain, and we will continue to pursue every avenue available to ensure that justice is done.” Her appeal to the justices turned on a 2007 nonprosecution agreement Epstein signed with federal prosecutors, which she claimed her conviction violated. The deal let Epstein avoid federal charges for pleading guilty to state-level sex crimes in Florida and serving 18 months in prison. It also included an unusual co-conspirators’ clause, which she argued binds every U.S. attorney in the country from pursuing certain charges against her. Lower courts found that the deal only covers the Southern District of Florida, where the agreement was signed, and does not apply to the federal prosecutors in New York who secured Maxwell’s conviction. “In this case, the government made a written promise that Epstein’s co-conspirators would not be prosecuted by the United States, and Maxwell was in fact prosecuted as a co-conspirator of Epstein by the United States,” Maxwell’s attorney, David Oscar Markus, wrote in her April petition to the justices. “The only question is whether the government’s promise that the ‘United States’ would not prosecute her was enforceable against the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York, or only against the Southern District of Florida,” he continued, urging the court’s review. The Justice Department opposed Maxwell’s appeal, rejecting her contention that the nonprosecution agreement applies to every judicial district in the country. “While ‘the United States’ could conceivably refer to the entire federal government, as petitioner urges, the entirety and context of the NPA here make clear that the term is used — as it often is — as one alternative way to refer to the USAO executing the agreement,” Solicitor General D. John Sauer told the court in July. As Maxwell’s petition awaited review at the Supreme Court, she simultaneously made overtures to President Trump, who has faced sharp criticism over his administration’s handling of the so-called Epstein files. Trump’s political base exploded with frustration after the Justice Department in July stated Epstein did not have a “client list” and confirmed his 2019 death was a suicide, two flash points for skeptics who have long claimed the government covered up the truth. Amid growing tensions, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Maxwell over the course of two days, during which she said she “never saw” Trump in “any inappropriate setting.” The president’s critics have accused him of withholding information about Epstein’s case because he is named in the files. After the meeting, Maxwell was transferred from a correctional facility in Florida to a lower-security prison camp in Texas. Democrats on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform asked DOJ’s inspector general’s office to investigate the move. Trump said in July that he’s “allowed to give her a pardon,” but that “nobody’s approached me with it.” Updated at 11:30 a.m. EDT Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
thehill.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Supreme Court turns away Missouri’s bid to revive gun law
Supreme Court turns away Missouri’s bid to revive gun law
The Supreme Court turned away Missouri’s bid to revive its law purporting to declare various federal gun restrictions unconstitutional in the state, the justices announced Monday. It has become a major battle over state versus federal authority. The Biden administration launched a lawsuit and convinced lower courts that Missouri’s statute violates the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause. After the change in administration, Trump’s Justice Department maintains that some provisions are unconstitutional. But it agreed the lower judge went too far in blocking the act’s entirety at the onset. The administration urged the Supreme Court to turn away Missouri’s appeal and send the case back so the injunction can be narrowed. “That is all the more reason why review by this Court is unwarranted at this juncture,” Solicitor General D. John Sauer wrote in court filings. Monday’s announcement came on the first day of the Supreme Court’s new term, a year already filled with major battles over race, LGBTQ rights and Trump’s second-term agenda. The justices considered Missouri’s petition at a closed-door conference last week alongside hundreds of other cases that had piled up over the summer. On Friday, the court announced it will hear a Second Amendment challenge to a Hawaii gun law, which bans concealed carry on private property without the owner’s express permission. Missouri’s Republican-led Legislature passed the Second Amendment Preservation Act in 2021, declaring certain federal gun laws unconstitutional and prohibits using state resources to enforce them. Missouri agencies and law enforcement also cannot hire anyone who has attempted to enforce those laws as a federal employee. Private parties can sue over violations and seek up to $50,000 penalties. The Biden administration challenged the law and won in the lower courts. The Supreme Court at an earlier stage of the case declined Missouri’s request for an emergency intervention that would enable the law’s enforcement as litigation proceeds. Justice Clarence Thomas, one of the court’s conservatives, publicly dissented. Back at the high court, Missouri’s petition insisted the law is constitutional and the federal government lacks the right to sue Missouri because the law is enforced by private citizens, not state actors. Missouri told the justices they should still take up the case to definitively reject the legal challenge, despite the Trump administration’s urging to turn away the appeal. “The Eighth Circuit’s reasoning is a Pandora’s Box that will misguide lower courts and impose a straitjacket on States,” the state wrote in court filings. “No wonder the Government refuses to defend it.” Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
thehill.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Trump ordered troop into Memphis and authorized lethal force on U.S. citizens.

This is the beginning of dictatorship in America. Donald Trump must be stopped!

Donate to Free Memphis and Please Retweet!
Stop Trump! Free Memphis!
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Republicans control all three branches of government. This is THEIR shit show!

Democrats MUST retake the House. We will expose MAGA and make them answer for their crimes.

Donate to support Democrats in the midterms. Please Retweet
Democrats MUST Retake the House Majority to Hold Trump and MAGA Accountable!
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
White House memo says furloughed federal workers aren't entitled to back pay
Scoop: White House memo says furloughed federal workers aren't entitled to back pay
Furloughed federal workers aren't guaranteed compensation for their forced time off during the government shutdown, according to a draft White House memo described to Axios by three sources. Why it matters: If the White House acts on that legal analysis, it would dramatically escalate President Trump's pressure on Senate Democrats to end the week-old shutdown by denying back pay to as many as 750,000 federal workers after the shutdown. Trump wants the Democrats to back a continuing resolution to fund the government with no strings about healthcare subsidies attached. "This would not have happened if Democrats voted for the clean CR," a senior administration official said. The big picture: Under Trump, the executive branch is grabbing more power than ever — a trend that's accelerating during the shutdown that began last week. Zoom in: At issue is the ''Government Employee Fair Treatment Act of 2019" that Trump signed during the last government shutdown, which lasted a record 35 days. Called GEFTA, the law has been widely interpreted as ensuring that furloughed workers automatically would be compensated after future shutdowns. But the new White House memo from the Office of Management and Budget argues that GEFTA has been misconstrued or, in the words of one source, is "deficient" because it was amended nine days later, on Jan. 25, 2019. "Does this law cover all these furloughed employees automatically? The conventional wisdom is: Yes, it does. Our view is: No, it doesn't," a senior White House official said. Friction point: The White House's stance revolves around the law's amended version, which added a phrase saying furloughed workers shall be compensated "subject to the enactment of appropriations Acts ending the lapse." That's a technical phrase for shutdown. To the White House, that means money for those workers needs to be specifically appropriated by Congress. The joint resolution containing that amendment to the law specified that the U.S. government would pay "obligations incurred" during that 2019 shutdown. "If it [GEFTA] was self-executing" in future shutdowns, "why did Congress do that? It's precedent," the White House official said, calling any other interpretation "ridiculous." What they're saying: Those who represent federal workers or advocate on their behalf say the White House is misreading the clear intent of the law. "There is no legal authority to support that interpretation of the statute," said Nekeisha Campbell, labor attorney with Alan Lescht & Associates. "When the language of a statute is plain, courts must apply it except in the rare circumstance when there is a clearly expressed legislative intent to the contrary, or when a literal application would frustrate the statute's purpose or lead to an absurd result." "The law here is quite clear. The caveat is, if you follow the law," said Sam Berger, senior fellow at the Center for Policy and Budget Priorities. He called the amended language a simple recognition of the appropriations process, not a restriction on compensating furloughed workers. Between the lines: The White House believes that although furloughed workers aren't guaranteed back pay unless specified by Congress, non-furloughed government employees who are now working without pay are automatically entitled to back pay after the shutdown. State of play: The White House analysis of the law reflects the administration's multipronged effort to make the shutdown unbearable for Democrats. Federal workers overwhelmingly made campaign contributions to Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris last year, Trump Republicans note. The furlough of hundreds of thousands of workers each day follows the administration's widespread, DOGE-led cuts to the federal workforce earlier this year. "This is not being done simply as a pain-point for Democrats," a second senior administration official told Axios. "We're seeking clarity. We believe the existing language is unclear. And the administration is looking for clarity." OMB Director Russ Vought has an expansive view of executive authority that has tested the constitutional limits of the president's powers (successfully so far). Vought's office has outlined how the administration could conduct mass firings of federal workers as a consequence of the shutdown — which critics say would be illegal. Trump posted a video Friday comparing Vought to the Grim Reaper. The Supreme Court last week gave Trump a green light to withhold congressionally authorized foreign aid money under what's called a "pocket rescission" that Vought pushed. After the shutdown began last Wednesday, Vought also announced the administration is withholding as much as $28 billion in infrastructure and energy-related projects in mostly Democratic states and cities, including New York City, home to the Democratic leaders of the House and Senate. Another Trump adviser said the GOP-led Congress is deferring more to the executive branch at the same time the Supreme Court is, emboldening the president. "Trump will take his chances in court," the adviser said. "Why not?"
www.axios.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Medicaid Cuts Kill

🔻900 billion cuts to Medicaid
🔻16 million lose their healthcare
🔻Hundreds of hospitals close
🔻Hundreds of nursing homes close

Trump must be stopped!

Show your support with a donation and Please Retweet!
Stop Trump!
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Behind Chicago’s Tense Week: Protester Clashes and Tactical Gear Downtown

Illinois Democrats say that the federal show of force is meant to intimidate and instill fear.
Behind Chicago’s Tense Week: Protester Clashes and Tactical Gear Downtown
Illinois Democrats say that the federal show of force is meant to intimidate and instill fear.
www.wsj.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Abigail Spanberger is poised to become the Virginia's first woman governor.

A victory here will show the country the Democrats are fighting back against Trump's Project 2025 agenda.

Please donate and share this link!

https://secure.actbl...
.
Abigail Spanberger for Virginia Governor
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
David Hogg's PAC is a Massive Scam!

Hogg launched Leaders We Deserve to support primaries against sitting Democrats, but most of the funds went to paying consultants.

Donate here to save Democratic incumbents from bad actors like David Hogg!
David Hogg's PAC is a Massive Scam. Quelle surprise.
Support our cause! Stop David Hogg!
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Virginia's off-year elections are coming. This is the first chance for voters to weigh in on Trump's 2nd term.

Democrats are fighting to maintain razor-thin legislative majorities.

Donate to @VADemocrats and Please Retweet
Support Virginia Democrats!
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
Abigail Spanberger is poised to become the Virginia's first woman governor.

A victory here will show the country the Democrats are fighting back against Trump's Project 2025 agenda.

Please donate and share this link!
Abigail Spanberger for Virginia Governor
Show your support with a contribution.
secure.actblue.com
getoutthevote2028.bsky.social
David Hogg's PAC is a Massive Scam!

Hogg launched Leaders We Deserve to support primaries against sitting Democrats, but most of the funds went to paying consultants.

Donate here to save Democratic incumbents from bad actors like David Hogg!
David Hogg's PAC is a Massive Scam. Quelle surprise.
Support our cause! Stop David Hogg!
secure.actblue.com
Reposted by Get Out The Vote!!!