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Illegal Voter Kept Active—For Years
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Illegal Voter Kept Active—For Years

Nine months after an illegal alien’s status hit the headlines, Maryland finally took his name off the voter rolls—only after watchdogs, lawmakers, and the threat of federal court turned up the heat. Story Snapshot A non-citizen school superintendent stayed on Maryland’s “active” voter list for more than a decade despite a deportation order. State officials admit they mostly “take the voter’s word for it” on citizenship instead of running real checks. County election bosses first hid key records, then reversed course when watchdogs threatened a federal lawsuit. The case exposes how loopholes and red tape can leave illegal aliens on voter rolls while citizens worry about election integrity. How An Illegal Alien Ended Up On Maryland’s Voter Rolls Ian Andre Roberts, a Guyanese national and former Baltimore school official who later ran Iowa’s largest school system, managed to register as a voter in Maryland and stay on the rolls for years.[1][8] Records show he affirmatively claimed to be a United States citizen on his voter registration form, even though federal immigration authorities had ordered him removed from the country.[1][2] Maryland law clearly says only United States citizens can register to vote, under penalty of perjury, yet the system still accepted his claim.[8] Roberts was arrested in Iowa in September 2025 for being an illegal alien in possession of firearms, which brought fresh attention to his background and legal status.[2] After the arrest, Maryland Republican lawmakers and election watchdog groups discovered that he remained listed as an active voter in Prince George’s County, years after he had moved away and long after he should have been ineligible.[3][8] The situation raised an obvious question for many citizens: if this one case slipped through for so long, how many others like it are still buried in the voter files? Nine Months Of Delays, Excuses, And Outside Pressure According to one watchdog group tracking the case, Roberts was still on Maryland’s voter rolls more than eight months after his arrest and three months after he pled guilty and admitted he was not a citizen.[3] County election officials at first released only redacted copies of his registration that hid his answer to the basic question, “Are you a U.S. citizen?”[1] They produced the full, unredacted records only after Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections and the American Accountability Foundation sent a formal demand under the National Voter Registration Act and warned of imminent federal litigation.[1] That pressure campaign also drew in Congress. The House Administration Committee, led by Chairman Bryan Steil, sent a letter to the Maryland State Board of Elections demanding answers about how a known non-citizen could register at least twice and remain on the rolls for so long.[2][4] Their letter warned that repeated redactions around Roberts’s registration suggested Maryland was either hiding a serious mistake or covering up a failure to verify citizenship.[2][4] Republican lawmakers in Maryland added their own letter, saying the case cast doubt on the accuracy of the state’s voter lists and demanding a full review.[8] Maryland’s “Trust The Applicant” System And Why It Failed Maryland’s own election chief has admitted that the state mostly relies on what applicants write on the form instead of checking citizenship against independent records.[5] In a public statement on non-citizen inquiries, State Board of Elections Administrator Jared DeMarinis explained that “when an individual registers to vote, election officials rely on the information that is provided by the voter.”[5] He also said that non-citizen removals usually start only when a voter self-reports or when jury commissioners flag someone as a non-citizen.[1][5] Maryland’s list-maintenance rules say officials can cancel a registration after notice if a jury commission reports that a voter is a non-citizen, or if other specific government sources confirm ineligibility.[11] Officials also stress that federal law, including the National Voter Registration Act, limits when a state can remove someone without the voter’s signature.[11] Those protections are meant to stop wrongful purges of real citizens, but in Roberts’s case, they meant even a long-standing federal deportation order did not automatically trigger removal from the rolls.[1] The system gave every benefit of the doubt to the registrant, not to the integrity of the list. Election Integrity Concerns In A Broader National Fight Nationally, many studies say proven non-citizen voting is extremely rare, measured in a handful of cases out of tens of millions of ballots.[21][22][23] That argument is now used by election lawyers and progressive groups to oppose stronger proof-of-citizenship requirements, calling them a “solution in search of a problem.”[18][19][21] But cases like Roberts show how just one determined non-citizen, helped by lax checks and layers of bureaucracy, can stay on the books for more than a decade and even survive a deportation order without triggering an automatic fix.[1][3][8] The Other Maryland Man finally removed from Maryland Voter Registration list. 9 months after it was discovered that a superintendent of a large school district was not only a noncitizen with a final deportation order, but also had been illicitly registered to vote in… pic.twitter.com/xqKTCskJQR — Maryland Freedom Caucus (@MDFreedomCaucus) June 19, 2026 For many conservative voters, this is not about proving millions of illegal votes. It is about whether state officials respect the basic rule that only citizens pick our leaders and write our laws. In Maryland, some local towns even allow non-citizens to vote in certain local elections, which makes tight separation and careful list management even more important.[12][20] Yet this case shows a system that shrugs at red flags and moves only when watchdogs and Congress apply public pressure. Sources: [1] Web – How It Took Nine Months To Remove One Illegal Alien From Voter Rolls [2] Web – Maryland Elections Officials Back Down on Illegal Alien Voter … [3] Web – Maryland Republican lawmakers demand review of State voter rolls [4] Web – Ian Roberts, illegal immigrant facing prison for citizenship fraud, … [5] YouTube – Maryland lawmakers call for answers after learning Iowa … [8] Web – This guy was registered to vote in Maryland for over a decade even … [11] Web – – EXAMINING POTENTIAL UPDATES TO THE NVRA – GovInfo [12] Web – Voter Registration List Maintenance [18] Web – – THE BIDEN-HARRIS BORDER CRISIS: NONCITIZEN VOTING [19] Web – The Truth about False Claims of Noncitizen Voting – Voting Rights Lab [20] Web – Voting By Noncitizens is a Non-Issue – Fair Elections Center [21] Web – Four Things to Know about Noncitizen Voting [22] Web – Unpacking Myths About Noncitizen Voting — How Heritage … [23] Web – Explainer: Noncitizen Voting in U.S. Elections | migrationpolicy.org

Word-Salad Blitz Masks Lemon Case Gaps
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Word-Salad Blitz Masks Lemon Case Gaps

Kamala Harris is once again crying “accountability” for Donald Trump over the Don Lemon arrest while dodging basic facts in yet another word-salad answer. Story Snapshot Harris claims Trump “infringed rights and liberties” by arresting Don Lemon and other journalists, calling it an attack on the press. Trump officials say Lemon was charged over a disruptive anti–immigration enforcement protest inside a Minnesota church, not for his opinions. A federal magistrate and then an appeals court both pushed back on parts of the government’s arrest theory, undercutting Harris’s sweeping claims. Harris’s past “accountability” talk for Trump and her meandering answers feed her long‑running image problem with vague, circular rhetoric. Harris Uses Don Lemon Arrest To Revive Old ‘Accountability’ Narrative Former Vice President Kamala Harris is using the Don Lemon case to repeat a familiar script about Donald Trump and “accountability.” In a social media statement, she claimed Trump and his administration were “once again infringing upon our rights and liberties” by arresting Lemon and fellow journalist Georgia Fort during coverage of a church protest.[2] She said they were simply doing their “obligation to the American populace by reporting and informing” and had been “apprehended for it,” framing the episode as pure retaliation against the press.[2] Harris’s framing fits years of messaging where she insists Trump must be held legally responsible, no matter how shaky the case. Back in 2019, she argued that if she were president, the Department of Justice would have “no choice” but to bring obstruction charges against Trump, citing “ten clear incidents of obstruction of justice.”[1] When pressed on whether that would politicize prosecutions, she tried to claim she would not “direct” the department, even as she urged specific charges.[1] Critics saw that as a preview of how she now talks about the Lemon case. What Actually Happened In The Don Lemon Case The arrest that Harris now calls a rights violation grew out of a January 18 protest inside Cities Church in St. Paul, Minnesota, against immigration enforcement.[10] Federal officials said Don Lemon and Georgia Fort were part of a “coordinated disruption” that interfered with worship and violated civil-rights laws protecting churchgoers’ free exercise of religion.[10] The Department of Homeland Security announced conspiracy and civil rights charges, saying agents arrested Lemon, Fort, and others “at my instruction” for the church incident.[10] Press-freedom advocates and many liberal politicians quickly flipped the story, saying Lemon was “not for committing a crime” but “for covering a protest as a journalist.”[14] California Governor Gavin Newsom claimed Lemon was arrested “for literally reporting the news” and accused Trump of trying to “eliminate the First Amendment” by targeting journalists.[15] Groups like Free Press argued that Lemon and Fort were engaged in “constitutionally protected activity” while covering the protest and warned the arrests showed the government punishing critical coverage.[21] Courts Push Back, But Harris’s Legal Claims Still Lack Clarity The legal record in the Lemon case is more mixed than Harris’s sound bites suggest. A federal magistrate judge initially rejected the government’s bid to arrest Lemon, finding the case too weak at that stage.[21] Later, a federal appeals court, including two judges appointed by Trump, also turned back an emergency Justice Department request related to arresting Lemon and some demonstrators, undercutting a key part of the enforcement strategy.[17] These rulings showed that courts were willing to check federal power, even under Trump, which cuts against Harris’s picture of a lawless crackdown. At the same time, the Justice Department did secure a grand jury indictment against Lemon and Fort on two civil rights counts tied to interference with religious worship, and they were taken into custody before being released.[11][26] The department argued it was defending churchgoers’ First Amendment rights to worship without disruption, not punishing press coverage.[11] Free-speech experts, however, countered that “journalism is not a crime” and said simply being present to record a protest does not equal physical interference with a place of worship.[26] This clash between competing rights is serious, but Harris often skips those details when she talks about “accountability.” Pattern Of Word Salad Undermines Harris’s Credibility Harris’s latest comments on Trump, Lemon, and “rights and liberties” come as she continues to face heavy criticism for vague and rambling answers on tough topics. Media analysts have long noted her habit of repeating the same phrases and rearranging words instead of adding substance, a style often mocked as “word salad.” One detailed review of her public speaking found that she frequently cycles through a single talking point, trying to sound deep while saying very little new.[2] This pattern makes it harder for listeners to pin down her actual legal or policy argument. Not sure if Don Lemon was aware he said to Kamala Harris, “I’m sitting here with the…First Black woman President.” Completely understandable Don was overwhelmed interviewing Kamala and emotional towards the end of the interview. pic.twitter.com/f4UJPnbcTR — Anne Smith (@AnneS4Justice) June 19, 2026 That communication problem matters when she talks about the Constitution and Trump. Many conservatives remember her 2019 promise to push obstruction charges as soon as she had the power, even though the case was far from settled.[1] Now, in the Lemon dispute, she again jumps straight to claims of “violation of our rights and freedoms”[2] without clearly explaining how the specific statutes, the church setting, and the court rulings fit together. For readers who care about both free speech and equal enforcement of the law, that kind of slippery rhetoric raises red flags. Sources: [1] Web – Kamala’s New Comment About Trump, ‘Accountability’ Has Eyebrows Going … [2] Web – Don Lemon Asks Kamala Harris About Prosecuting Trump [10] Web – “People are done with the status quo…” Our full conversation is out … [11] Web – Trump administration charges Don Lemon with federal civil rights … [14] YouTube – The arrest of Don Lemon and Trump’s relationship with the media [15] Web – The Trump administration tried to silence him. But Don Lemon is … [17] Web – Trump calls for Don Lemon’s arrest and then claims to know nothing … [21] Web – Timeline of government attacks on journalists in the United States [26] Web – [PDF] under attack: how enhanced anti-protest laws

DOJ Targets MLB Over Pride Caps
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DOJ Targets MLB Over Pride Caps

A federal civil-rights probe into Major League Baseball over San Francisco Giants “Pride Night” has turned a simple ballcap into the latest battleground over faith, speech, and forced activism in America’s pastime. Story Snapshot The Department of Justice (DOJ) has asked the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to investigate MLB for possible religious discrimination tied to Pride Night warnings.[1][2][3] Giants pitchers wrote Bible verses on rainbow Pride caps and were warned by MLB under its uniform policy, sparking claims their Christian faith was singled out.[1][2] Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon says federal law bars employers from using players as vehicles for pro-Pride messages over their religious objections.[1][2] MLB insists it only enforced a content-neutral rule against writing on equipment, but past allowances for other slogans raise questions about a double standard.[1][2][3][5] How a Pride Night Hat Turned Into a Federal Case During the San Francisco Giants’ Pride Night celebration, three pitchers chose a quiet protest: they wrote Bible verses on the rainbow-colored caps the league provided for the event.[1][2][3] League officials then warned the players, citing a rule that bars writing personal messages on hats or other gear unless the league approves it.[1][2][5] That warning alone might sound minor, but it hit a nerve for many fans who already feel pro-Pride messaging is pushed everywhere while Christian speech is policed. According to reporting on Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon’s letter, the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division said the Civil Rights Act does not allow Major League Baseball to place “unreasonable burdens” on players who object, on religious grounds, to serving as “the League’s vehicle for pro-Pride messages.”[1][2] The letter frames this not as a style dispute over hats, but as a possible violation of Title VII religious-accommodation rules, which apply to every employer in the country.[1][3] What the DOJ and EEOC Are Looking At Reports say the DOJ has now “launched a probe” and referred the matter to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission for formal investigation.[1][2][3] That means federal civil-rights lawyers see enough risk that MLB’s actions could violate Title VII to bring in the main workplace-discrimination agency, rather than just issuing a press statement and moving on.[1][2][3] Under modern Supreme Court rulings, employers must bend uniform or dress rules when needed to reasonably accommodate sincere religious practice unless doing so would cause substantial costs.[11][12][17] Dhillon’s reported letter stresses that federal law is “clear” that employers must adjust uniform requirements when needed to respect religious exercise.[2][3] The question for the EEOC is whether warning players for writing Scripture on Pride gear, in this specific setting, crossed the line from neutral rule enforcement into punishing them for declining to be part of a Pride message they believe conflicts with their faith.[1][2][3] For many conservatives, that question goes far beyond baseball and into whether people of faith can say “no” to cultural campaigns at work without fear. MLB’s Uniform Rule Defense and the Alleged Double Standard Major League Baseball’s public answer is simple: the warning, it says, had “nothing to do” with the Bible verses and everything to do with a long-standing uniform rule.[1][2] That rule reportedly bars players from writing or attaching nicknames or messages to apparel or equipment, whether the message is religious or not.[5] Supporters of the league argue that if players are allowed to write what they want on game gear, uniforms will quickly turn into political billboards across the league. Critics point to a different pattern. Dhillon’s letter and related coverage note that the league previously allowed players to wear “Black Lives Matter” patches and other social-justice messaging, and relaxed cleat rules for certain personal messages.[1][2][3] If MLB bent the rules for some causes and slogans but cracked down only when players added Bible verses to Pride gear, that can look less like a neutral rule and more like picking which beliefs are acceptable. That perception of a double standard is driving a lot of the outrage among faith-minded fans.[1][2][3] Why Religious Accommodation Law Matters Far Beyond Baseball This clash comes after the Supreme Court raised the bar for employers who want to deny religious accommodations under Title VII.[11][12][15][16] In a 2023 case, the Court said companies must now show that granting a religious accommodation would cause “substantial increased costs” to their business, not just a small inconvenience.[11][12][15][17] The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission explains that this duty covers dress, grooming, and symbolic expressions at work, as long as the request does not create a serious hardship.[17] DOJ Launches Probe Into Giants Pride Night Controversy As Feds Rip MLB ‘Double Standard’ https://t.co/QoY8Eey3KU — Real News Now (@RealNewsApp) June 19, 2026 In plain terms, that means a league cannot brush off a Christian player’s concern about Pride branding by saying, “Those are the rules, deal with it,” if a simple change would respect his faith without real cost.[11][12][17] It also means employers cannot treat “coworker discomfort” with someone’s beliefs as a valid reason to shut down religious expression.[11][16][17] For many conservatives, the key line is that no American should be forced to promote a moral message they reject as a condition of keeping their job, whether they work at a post office, a factory, or a ballpark.[11][15][17] What Comes Next for Players, Fans, and the Culture War in Sports The EEOC probe could force Major League Baseball to open its books on how it has enforced uniform rules, what exceptions it has made, and whether it gave these Giants players any real way to opt out of Pride branding while still doing their jobs.[2][3][5] The outcome may push the league to write clearer rules for theme nights and to spell out how players of faith can stand aside from political or moral messages without fear of punishment.[5][17] For now, the case highlights a deeper frustration many fans feel: sports leagues that once united the country now often carry one-sided cultural campaigns, while the people who ask to quietly honor their faith are the ones told to sit down and be quiet.[1][2][3] As this investigation unfolds under the Trump administration’s Justice Department, many conservatives will be watching whether Washington is finally willing to defend the right of workers, even star athletes, to say “no” when the uniform turns into a flag for someone else’s agenda.[1][2][3] Sources: [1] Web – DOJ opens inquiry into MLB over SF GIANTS players’ protest… [2] Web – DOJ refers MLB to EEOC over Bible verse warnings on Pride Night … [3] Web – DOJ launches civil rights investigation after Giants’ Pride protest [5] Web – Missouri attorney general calls on MLB not to discipline players over … [11] Web – DOJ launches investigation into MLB’s handling of Giants’ Pride Night … [12] Web – Supreme Court Issues Ruling in Religious Accommodation Title VII … [15] Web – Defining Religious Discrimination in Employment: Has Reasonable … [16] Web – Groff v. DeJoy – Harvard Law Review [17] Web – U.S. Supreme Court Sides with Worker | Religious Accommodation …

Taxpayer-Funded ‘Palace’ Becomes Air Force One
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Taxpayer-Funded ‘Palace’ Becomes Air Force One

A $400 million “flying palace” from a foreign monarchy is now America’s new Air Force One—paid for by U.S. taxpayers and headed eventually to Trump’s presidential library. Story Snapshot Qatar gave the Pentagon a Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet worth about $400 million to serve as an interim Air Force One. The Pentagon says the jet was accepted “in accordance with all federal rules and regulations” as an unconditional government-to-government gift. Taxpayers, not Qatar, are footing the classified retrofit bill, which Air Force leaders say will still cost up to hundreds of millions of dollars. Plans and past reporting indicate the aircraft will later be transferred to the Trump presidential library foundation, raising sharp ethics and emoluments debate. What Exactly Is This New Qatari Air Force One? The Department of Defense says it has accepted a luxury Boeing 747-8 from the government of Qatar for use as an interim Air Force One for President Donald Trump.[3] Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said the secretary of defense accepted the aircraft “in accordance with all federal rules and regulations,” and that the department will make sure it meets mission and security needs to carry the president.[3] News outlets and official briefings describe the jet as a top-end jumbo, long used by Qatar’s royal family and labeled a “flying palace” because of its lavish interior.[1] Estimates place its value around $400 million, making it one of the most expensive foreign gifts ever handed to the United States government.[1] Reports from Defense News and other outlets say the jet is being converted into what the Air Force calls the “VC-25B Bridge,” a stopgap presidential transport to back up or replace the aging VC‑25A fleet while long-delayed replacement planes are finished.[7][15] The aircraft was delivered to a facility in San Antonio, Texas, where a major defense contractor is handling structural, communication, and defensive system upgrades under a classified contract.[8][15] The Air Force has told reporters it expects the Qatar‑gifted aircraft to be ready for presidential missions by the summer of 2026, with commissioning flights starting after an unveiling at Joint Base Andrews.[7][15] Who Pays, What It Costs, and Why It Raises Eyebrows Qatar’s memorandum of understanding with the Pentagon describes the jet as an “unconditional donation” and makes clear the United States government will pay nothing for the airplane itself.[5][13] That sounds good at first for taxpayers who watched Washington pile up trillions in debt under old spending habits. But the real bill is in the conversion. Air Force Secretary Troy Meink told lawmakers the cost to retrofit the aircraft for presidential use will likely be under $400 million, with final figures classified because of sensitive systems.[5][9][13] Other lawmakers and experts have warned total expenses could climb far higher once round‑the‑clock security, specialized electronics, and long‑term maintenance are included.[4][7] American taxpayers are covering every dollar of those upgrades, even though the base airframe came as a foreign gift.[4][6][8] Critics in Congress, led mostly by Democrats but joined by some national‑security hawks, argue this structure gives a wealthy foreign monarchy outsized influence over a core American symbol while U.S. families still pay more for groceries, gas, and higher interest on federal debt.[2][21] Senator Brian Schatz said on the Senate floor that “no president should take a $400 million gift from a foreign country,” warning that the foreign emoluments ban exists to prevent exactly this kind of arrangement.[21] The White House and Justice Department lawyers countered that because the jet was given to the Pentagon, not directly to Trump, and is described as a “bona fide” gift with no strings attached, it passes legal tests for bribery and foreign gifts.[1][20] Security, Sovereignty, and the Plan to Send It to Trump’s Library Defense officials admit the Qatar jet could not carry the commander in chief safely without major work.[3][6][8] The Pentagon says it will “ensure proper security measures” so the plane can meet the standards for transporting the president, including hardened communications, anti‑missile defenses, and sweeps for any spy devices that might have been installed while the aircraft was in foreign hands.[3][5][8] Sources told multiple outlets that American teams must check wiring, electronics, and structural elements to guarantee there are no hidden vulnerabilities built in during its years as a royal aircraft.[6][8] Until those upgrades and checks are complete, the jet is treated as a high‑value but not yet trusted asset, parked under heavy guard and controlled by the Air Force.[8][9] The U.S. Air Force finally unveiled and accepted VC-25B Bridge 25-3300 at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, where it has begun commissioning flights ahead of entry into presidential service. The aircraft has an unusual history. Before becoming the VC-25B Bridge, it flew as A7-HBJ, a… pic.twitter.com/Z4osqnQXip — Babak Taghvaee – The Crisis Watch (@BabakTaghvaee1) June 20, 2026 The most controversial detail for many Americans is what happens after Trump leaves office. Multiple reports, citing administration and Qatar‑side sources, say the long‑term plan is for the United States Air Force to use the plane as Air Force One during Trump’s term, then transfer ownership to the Donald J. Trump Presidential Library Foundation near the end of his presidency.[1][7][20] Senator Schatz and other critics argue this means taxpayers fund the multimillion‑dollar conversion of a foreign gift that will eventually benefit a private presidential foundation, even if lawyers say the paperwork keeps it technically within the law.[7][21] Supporters respond that the deal still leaves the country with years of upgraded presidential airlift at no purchase cost, and insist no evidence shows a change in U.S. foreign policy toward Qatar in exchange for the plane.[5][20] For conservatives, the core tension remains familiar: balancing a welcome upgrade to vital national‑security hardware against the need to guard American sovereignty, avoid foreign entanglements, and insist on full transparency when elites in Washington mix public power, private benefit, and foreign money. Sources: [1] Web – New Air Force One plane, $400M jet gifted by Qatar, unveiled by … [2] YouTube – Trump’s new Air Force One? Qatar’s jet gift sparks legal questions [3] Web – Trump’s Air Force One deal with Qatar not final despite U.S. claims [4] Web – Pentagon says it has accepted Qatar’s gift of a luxury megajet for … [5] Web – Trump’s Air Force One deal with Qatar not finalized, being reviewed … [6] Web – Defense Department accepts luxury jet from Qatar for Trump’s use [7] Web – US accepts luxury jet from Qatar for use as Air Force One for Trump [8] Web – Republicans reject push to block Trump from using Qatari jet as Air … [9] Web – Qatar’s gift plane is awaiting an overhaul in San Antonio – NPR [13] Web – Pentagon says it has accepted Boeing jet from Qatar that will be … [15] YouTube – Defense Department accepts Boeing 747 from Qatar for Trump’s use [20] Web – Qatar gifting POTUS a 747-8 to be used as Air Force One stopgap [21] Web – Trump admin poised to accept luxury jet as gift for Trump from Qatar

Flesh-Eating Maggots Breach Texas
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Flesh-Eating Maggots Breach Texas

A flesh‑eating maggot has slipped past America’s biosecurity wall, and now ranchers are asking why Washington’s billion‑dollar defenses were not fully in place before Texas cattle started suffering. Story Snapshot New World screwworm, a flesh‑eating parasite, has been confirmed again in Texas cattle after decades of eradication. The federal government is now racing to build a massive sterile‑fly factory in South Texas, raising questions about why this capacity was not ready earlier. USDA officials say they activated containment plans quickly, but Texas leaders warn that every day of delay gives the parasite more time to spread. Billions in livestock, wildlife, and rural livelihoods are at stake, making this a test of federal priorities and competence on core agricultural security. A Flesh‑Eating Parasite Returns To Texas New World screwworm is not a minor bug problem; it is a flesh‑eating parasite whose larvae burrow into open wounds on warm‑blooded animals and can kill cattle, pets, and wildlife if left untreated.[21] The parasite was eradicated from United States livestock in the 1960s using a special “sterile insect” program, and since then the federal government has relied on a barrier of released sterile flies in Central America and along the southern border to keep it from coming back.[8][12] That shield has now failed, with confirmed cases in Texas cattle and quarantines expanding across parts of South Texas.[21][22] The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has stressed that this is not a food safety crisis and that store‑bought meat remains safe.[13] The real threat is to live animals and to the ranching families who depend on them. Screwworm infestations can turn a simple cut into a life‑threatening wound and force costly treatment or euthanasia for infected animals.[12][21] For cattle country already squeezed by inflation, drought, and high feed prices, the return of this parasite feels like one more avoidable hit that should have been headed off at the border. How The Sterile Fly Strategy Works — And Where It Lagged For decades, America’s main weapon against screwworm has been the sterile insect technique, where facilities mass‑produce male screwworm flies, expose them to radiation so they cannot father offspring, and then release them by air and truck over target regions.[8][12] When these sterile males mate with wild females, the eggs do not hatch and the parasite population collapses over time. This method is proven, environmentally friendly, and was the key to clearing screwworm from the United States in the first place.[12][16] Until the recent outbreak, the only active sterile screwworm fly production facility for North America was in Panama, run jointly by USDA and Panama’s agriculture ministry.[8][12] That plant can produce on the order of 100–120 million sterile flies per week in outbreak situations.[8][12] USDA itself has said that to match the surge power used to eradicate screwworm decades ago, total weekly production needs to approach about 500 million sterile flies.[13] In other words, Washington knew for years that foreign capacity alone was not enough if the parasite marched north again in a big way. Ramping Up After The Texas Case Only after new Texas cases and growing concern along the border did USDA roll out a sweeping construction and upgrade plan across the region. The department announced a new sterile fly production facility in Edinburg, Texas, at Moore Air Base, designed to produce up to 300 million sterile flies per week and to serve as the only United States‑based sterile screwworm factory.[11] Officials also committed tens of millions of dollars to expand a Mexican facility in Metapa and to add dispersal sites across Mexico so sterile flies could be dropped over key migration routes before parasites reach the border.[9] USDA has opened a sterile fly dispersal facility at Moore Air Force Base in Edinburg that can release up to 100 million sterile flies per week, giving the government the ability to spread flies quickly along the border and even into the United States if needed.[9][5] The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association welcomed the Texas factory plan as “a major investment” and a big step toward ending reliance on foreign plants for this critical defense tool.[3][6] Ranch groups see the build‑out as necessary, but they also understand that concrete poured in 2025 and 2026 cannot undo years when domestic capacity did not exist. USDA Says Response Was Aggressive; Texas Leaders Push Back Federal officials argue that once the first Texas livestock case was confirmed, they moved fast to contain the outbreak. USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service describes a unified incident command, a 20‑kilometer infested zone around the case, quarantines, movement controls, and expanded surveillance as part of a coordinated “One Health” response with state and local partners.[13][21] The department is also funding up to $100 million in research to improve sterile fly production and response tools going forward.[13][11] On the ground in Texas, however, frustration has boiled over. Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller has publicly warned that “every day we delay gives this pest another opportunity to spread” and has pressed USDA to accelerate fly releases and infrastructure.[19] Some Texas voices note that construction contracts and grand‑opening ceremonies for new facilities came only after the parasite had already reached United States soil and rural families were staring at real losses.[1][6] That pattern feeds a familiar rural worry: Washington finds money for trendy causes but moves slower when core food and energy producers need urgent help. Spending Fights, Delays, And A Broader Pattern Of Neglect Reports from former officials suggest earlier federal spending reviews and budget skepticism in Washington slowed funding for at least one facility that experts viewed as crucial to slowing the screwworm threat to the cattle supply.[17] A planned $100 million research push on new screwworm tools was also delayed, and doubts about a second Texas‑based facility surfaced inside the federal budget office.[17] While those debates were playing out in the capital, the parasite kept advancing north through Latin America, shrinking the margin for error before it reached Texas pastures. This morning, I joined City of Laredo Mayor Dr. Victor Treviño and State Representative Richard Raymond to discuss the growing threat of the New World screwworm and the ongoing efforts at the federal, state, and local levels to protect livestock, animal health, and our… pic.twitter.com/Q8xkBlzjAQ — Rep. Henry Cuellar (@RepCuellar) June 19, 2026 The screwworm fight fits a larger pattern conservatives know well: federal agencies talk about “One Health” frameworks, climate initiatives, and global conferences while basic border surveillance and domestic production capacity lag.[13][23] USDA’s own response playbook stresses early detection, rapid movement controls, and strong sterile fly deployment as the keys to stopping screwworm before it gets established.[20] Yet many ranchers say they mostly saw that playbook after the fact, once carcasses, vet bills, and quarantine zones made the cost of delay painfully clear. Where Things Stand Now For Ranchers And Rural Communities Today, USDA is dispersing sterile flies across affected areas, expanding traps, and warning livestock owners to inspect animals often and treat wounds quickly.[13][20] The department maintains that risk to people is very low and that the food supply remains safe, which is reassuring but does little to calm ranchers watching a deadly parasite chew into their herds.[13][21] For families who built their lives around cattle, goats, and working dogs, even a “low” risk feels too high when Washington had years of warning and only fully mobilized after Texas animals were already suffering. For conservative readers, this outbreak raises a blunt question: if the federal government can spend hundreds of millions on new labs, sterile fly factories, and research once the cameras arrive, why was more of that capacity not ready before a flesh‑eating maggot crossed the line into Texas? The answer will say a lot about what Washington truly values—paper plans and talking points, or the real‑world security of the ranchers, farmers, and rural communities who feed the nation. Sources: [1] Web – Flesh-eating maggot outbreak puts administration response under … [3] YouTube – $750M sterile fly facility being built in South Texas to combat New … [5] Web – USDA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Break Ground on New … [6] Web – Today marked the grand opening of the sterile fly dispersal facility … [8] Web – The USDA believes it can contain a case of New World screwworm … [9] Web – Southwest Animal Health Research Foundation /USDA Sterile … [11] Web – SIT 2.0: 21st Century genetic technology for the screwworm sterile … [12] Web – USDA Announces Sweeping Plans to Protect the United States from … [13] Web – [PDF] Eradicating New World Screwworm with Sterile Insect Technique [16] Web – USDA’s “Male-Only” Fly Breakthrough to Transform Screwworm … [17] Web – Remember when people laughed at sterile fly programs? Now we’re … [19] Web – USDA Opens State-of-the-Art Livestock Insects Research Laboratory … [20] Web – In a statement last week, Texas’s agriculture commissioner, Sid … [21] Web – [PDF] NWS Response Playbook – usda aphis [22] Web – New World screwworm update: confirmed U.S. livestock case The … [23] Web – A flesh-eating parasite was just confirmed in Texas livestock