| ◼ “Some say the world will end in fire, some say in ICE.”
◼ What have the self-driving vehicles done to anyone? Rioters across Los Angeles set Waymo cabs ablaze in a spasm of violence over federal immigration enforcement in the West Coast metropolis. As is always the case with “mostly peaceful protest,” left-wing demonstrators have destroyed property, blocked traffic, and hurled objects at law enforcement. President Trump responded by activating California National Guard troops without a request by the governor, Gavin Newsom: a highly unusual move, but one within his legal authority. State and city officials are condemning the activation of the Guard as a “provocation,” although usually the only people provoked by troops standing in front of a federal building to keep it from getting attacked are those who might want to attack it. There’s much talk of what can be done to “de-escalate” the situation. The first step would be for L.A.’s left-wing activists to stop harassing and assaulting federal officers — and the police officers of their own city — for doing their jobs.
◼ Sometimes in the Trump administration, doing the easy thing is hard. Regarding the celebrated case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia: Once he was deported to El Salvador in violation of a court order, the administration should have quickly brought him back to the U.S. and then legally deported him. After devoting countless man-hours to obfuscating in courtrooms and legal briefs, the administration has finally availed itself of this obvious option. That said, Abrego Garcia was never the father of the year, as the left tried to portray him, and the DOJ has now charged him with human smuggling. The administration will have to prove its case in court but is now unquestionably operating in accord with the law, which is the best way to do law enforcement.
◼ Opponents of Republicans’ Medicaid plans say that they will reduce enrollment in the program. They’re correct, and that’s a good thing. Medicaid enrollment is currently too high. One troubling reason is that millions of people who are not eligible because their incomes are too high are currently enrolled. The second is that some states have allowed illegal immigrants to enroll. Everyone should be on board with kicking those two groups of people off the program. The third reason, where opinions differ, is that Obamacare expanded Medicaid to cover able-bodied, working-age people, and the federal government pays states a higher reimbursement rate to cover them than it does to cover the children and disabled people that Medicaid is supposed to be for. That has led to the current situation, where the national Medicaid enrollment rate is double the poverty rate, and disabled people are on waiting lists while able-bodied people are covered. Medicaid is also the No. 1 program for improper payments. Getting Medicaid under control means spending less money on it and covering fewer people, and Republicans should not be ashamed of doing so.
◼ Is is the sort of self-inflicted disaster that could be foreseen by only, well, everyone. In February, members of the Democratic National Committee elected 24-year-old David Hogg as one of three vice-chairs. Hogg was previously best known for insisting that the Second Amendment does not protect an individual’s right to own a firearm, arguing that the National Rifle Association is a terrorist organization, and making ill-informed and hard-left statements on social media. In April, he announced that his organization, Leaders We Deserve, would spend $20 million in Democratic primaries to elect younger, further-left candidates. That is, a DNC leader intended to defeat incumbent Democrats. Hogg proved to be such a headache that in a May 15 Zoom meeting of DNC officers, DNC chairman Ken Martin fumed, “You essentially destroyed any chance I have to show the leadership that I need to.” Martin said he might quit. This week, DNC members voted to invalidate the February elections of Hogg and his counterpart Malcolm Kenyatta on a technicality. Hogg declared he would not run again. Hogg will return to fomenting messy and expensive primary battles among Democrats, and Republicans will wish him well.
◼ Successive Democratic administrations have stripped away rules designed to ensure that the mifepristone-based abortion pill is used under close medical supervision. In April, the Ethics and Public Policy Center released a study of over 865,000 insurance records — a sample 28 times larger than all the FDA-cited clinical trials put together — revealing that nearly 11 percent of women who used the drug suffered a serious adverse effect. The report led first Senator Josh Hawley (R., Mo.) and then Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to call on the FDA to change the warning label on the drug and conduct a top-to-bottom review of the pill’s risks. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary is following through. Meanwhile, the attorneys general of California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New York are petitioning the FDA to loosen the remaining restrictions — further proof that, where abortion advocates are concerned, the health and safety of women take a distant second place. |