COMMUNITY United States Politics Thread: Trump's Second Term

Being an air traffic controller is such a mentally demanding job that it has a mandatory retirement age of 56. Now, imagine being the only person who shows up for work. One air traffic controller managed all the flights at Newark-Liberty International Airport for three hours on Monday night. The New York City-area airport's recent technological outages have delayed or canceled hundreds of flights. The debacle also provoked a fifth of the airport's controllers to take 45-day trauma leave.

An anonymous air traffic controller told the New York Post that Newark was on the verge of a "zero ATC event," a doomsday scenario where no one was in the tower at one of the country's busiest international airports. They told the newspaper, "One of the controllers is canceling his day off and coming into work. But that's not going to safely cover the entire system." The lone controller, assisted by a trainee, worked from 6:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. within a system intended to function with 15 employees. While Newark was already operating at reduced capacity with one of its runways closed until June, it's incredibly risky to have a single qualified controller managing airliners in and out of an airport.

The Federal Aviation Administration disagreed with the whistleblowing controller's assessment of what happened on Monday. The agency stated that it had three fully trained and certified air traffic controllers. The FAA was also eager to point out that air traffic was at a relatively manageable level for the meager staff. Newark-Liberty saw roughly 20 arrivals and 20 departures per hour. While the crisis was handled without incident, this can't continue forever.

The Trump administration seems more concerned about ensuring it isn't blamed for the problems with air traffic control. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy deflected all responsibility during a press conference on Monday, the same day as the alleged single controller shift. He said, "I think it is clear that the blame belongs with the last administration. Joe Biden did nothing to fix the system they knew was broke." Sean, people are dead! There were mass firings at the FAA in the days leading to the fatal mid-air collision at Reagan National Airport. Even if Biden did nothing to fix the system, Trump made the issues even worse.

 

Funds from migrants sent back home help fuel some towns’ economies. A GOP plan targets that​

House Republicans want to tax remittances, which would cover over 40 million people in the U.S., including green card and visa holders who send money to families.
Exchange rate information displayed outside a currency exchange office

Exchange rate information displayed outside a currency exchange office in Mexico City in February.Mayolo Lopez / Bloomberg via Getty Images
WASHINGTON — Israel Vail’s entire life in the small western Guatemalan town of Cajolá is built off the money that his three children send home from the United States.

The money from their construction jobs paid for the two-story white home where Vail now lives — and where his children, who are in the U.S. illegally, would also reside if they ever get deported. Vail, 53, invested some of the money in opening a local food shop, which he uses to keep his family afloat.


In small migratory towns like Cajolá, it is not unusual for the entire economy to be built off remittances, the funds sent by migrant workers back to their home countries.

“People here, they don’t live luxuriously, but they live off remittances,” Vail said.

House Republicans have included in President Donald Trump’s big priority bill a 5% excise tax on remittance transfers that would cover more than 40 million people, including green card holders and nonimmigrant visa holders, such as people on H-1B, H-2A and H-2B visas. U.S. citizens would be exempt.

Trump also recently announced that he is finalizing a presidential memorandum to “shut down remittances” sent by people in the U.S. illegally. White House and Treasury officials have not responded to requests for comment from The Associated Press on specifics of the presidential memorandum that Trump previewed in an April 25 Truth Social post and how it would work.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum shot back on the measure and called on Republican lawmakers to reconsider it, saying it “would damage the economy of both nations and is also contrary to the spirit of economic freedom that the U.S. government claims to defend.”

“Remittances are the fruit of the efforts of those who, through their honest work, strengthen not only the Mexican economy but also the United States’, which is why we consider this measure to be arbitrary and unjust,” she said in a morning press briefing.
 
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