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EXCLUSIVE: Trump Awards Massive Checks to Air Traffic Controllers Who Worked in Shutdown
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EXCLUSIVE: Trump Awards Massive Checks to Air Traffic Controllers Who Worked in Shutdown

FIRST ON THE DAILY SIGNAL—Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is making good on President Donald Trump’s promise to give $10,000 bonuses to air traffic controllers who continued to show up to work during the 43-day government shutdown. Duffy and Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Bryan Bedford will award 776 air traffic controllers and technicians a $10,000 award for their unpaid work during the shutdown. The money will come from “operating funds.” “These patriotic men and women never missed a beat and kept the flying public safe throughout shutdown,” Duffy said. “Democrats may not care about their financial well-being, but President Trump does. This award is an acknowledgement of their dedication and a heartfelt appreciation for going above and beyond in service to the nation.” The award will be sent to employees who maintained perfect attendance during the shutdown. Recipients will receive an automated notification during the week of Nov. 24. Recipients will receive their payment no later than Dec. 9. Trump first floated the idea Nov. 10 on Truth Social, saying, “All Air Traffic Controllers must get back to work, NOW!!! Anyone who doesn’t will be substantially ‘docked.'” “For those Air Traffic Controllers who were GREAT PATRIOTS, and didn’t take ANY TIME OFF for the ‘Democrat Shutdown Hoax,’ I will be recommending a BONUS of $10,000 per person for distinguished service to our Country.” “For those that did nothing but complain, and took time off, even though everyone knew they would be paid, IN FULL, shortly into the future, I am NOT HAPPY WITH YOU,” the president added. Due to insufficient staffing at airports during the shutdown, Duffy reduced flight capacity by 10% at 40 major airports. Duffy said some air traffic controllers had to work 10-hour days, six days per week during the shutdown. “That pressure on the controllers were giving us numbers that were not troubling, but were concerning. So my job is to be preemptive,” he said. Last week, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem also announced $10,000 bonuses for Transportation Security Administration workers who provided “exemplary” service during the shutdown. The post EXCLUSIVE: Trump Awards Massive Checks to Air Traffic Controllers Who Worked in Shutdown appeared first on The Daily Signal.

Do Vaccines Cause Autism? CDC Moves From Denial to Doubt  
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Do Vaccines Cause Autism? CDC Moves From Denial to Doubt  

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its information on the potential link between autism and vaccines, no longer ruling out the possibility of causation.   “We (HHS) are updating the CDC’s website to reflect gold standard, evidence-based science,” Health and Human Services Press Secretary Emily Hilliard told The Daily Signal.  On Wednesday, the CDC updated its page titled “Autism and Vaccines.” The website now includes three key points:   The claim “vaccines do not cause autism” is not an evidence-based claim because studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines cause autism.   Studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities.  HHS has launched a comprehensive assessment of the causes of autism, including investigations on plausible biologic mechanisms and potential causal links.  ROBERT KENNEDY: 'The Department of Health and Human Services Will Act on Acetaminophen'@RobertKennedyJr announces that cases of autism are linked to pharmaceutical products that contain acetaminophen, which is prevalent in Tylenol, when taken during pregnancy. Additionally, the… pic.twitter.com/vHr1wqwzYB— The Daily Signal (@DailySignal) September 22, 2025 The Department of Health and Human Services, led by Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., oversees the CDC. Kennedy, who joined President Donald Trump to lead the Make America Healthy Again movement, is widely known for questioning the vaccine schedule.   “News reports have claimed that I am anti-vaccine or anti-industry. I am neither. I am pro-safety,” Kennedy said in January during his opening statement before the Senate Finance Committee.   “Secretary Kennedy has launched a comprehensive review of autism’s causes, including investigations into environmental and biologic factors, with an emphasis on transparency, reproducibility, and gold-standard science,” said Hilliard. “The CDC’s site updates are part of that broader effort to ensure all public-facing information reflects ongoing scientific inquiry.”  .@SecKennedy: “We’re losing a whole generation to addiction and mental health illness and it’s not necessary…It’s a priority for us.” pic.twitter.com/6khlFBo49L— HHS Rapid Response (@HHSResponse) November 18, 2025 Jay Richards, director and senior research fellow at The Heritage Foundation, explained the change in comments to The Daily Signal. “For years, the CDC has misrepresented what is known, and not known, about the connection between an ever-expanding childhood vaccine schedule and the massive surge in autism,” Richards told The Daily Signal. “In reality, public health agencies including the CDC have generally avoided conducting studies that could definitively answer that question. With these changes, the CDC has finally corrected this error.” “The CDC should not be in the business of preventing vaccine hesitancy,” he added. “It should be in the business of discovering and reporting the truth, no matter how inconvenient. I’m hopeful that these official language changes at the CDC website will be followed by a serious effort at both the CDC and HHS more broadly to follow the evidence on the autism question wherever it leads.”   Now that America has removed mercury from all vaccines, I call on every global health authority to do the same — to ensure that no child, anywhere in the world, is ever exposed to this deadly neurotoxin again. pic.twitter.com/LYitY3PfRc— Secretary Kennedy (@SecKennedy) November 3, 2025 The post Do Vaccines Cause Autism? CDC Moves From Denial to Doubt   appeared first on The Daily Signal.

House Ethics Committee Announces It Is Investigating Congressman Cory Mills
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House Ethics Committee Announces It Is Investigating Congressman Cory Mills

Rep. Cory Mills, R-Fla., faces a House Ethics Committee investigation following the introduction of a censure resolution by Rep. Nancy Mace, R-S.C., on Wednesday that was ultimately referred to the committee. In a Nov. 19 press release, the Ethics Committee’s chairman and ranking member said they would look into whether Mills had broken the law or otherwise violated standards of conduct. The release specifically cited “allegations that [Mills] may have: (1) failed to properly disclose required information on statements required to be filed with the House; (2) violated campaign finance laws and regulations in connection with his 2022 and 2024 election campaigns; (3) improperly solicited and/or received gifts, including in connection with privately sponsored officially-connected travel; (4) received special favors by virtue of his position; (5) engaged in misconduct with respect to allegations of sexual misconduct and/or dating violence; and/or (6) misused congressional resources or status.” Mills, who represents Florida’s 7th congressional district, has denied committing any wrong. The Army veteran of the Iraq war first joined the House of Representatives in 2023 after a successful business career in the defense industry where he co-founded companies that provided risk management and security services. On Wednesday, Mace had introduced a resolution to censure Mills and strip him of his assignments on the House Committee on Armed Services and the House Committee on Foreign Affairs. The House ended up voting by a margin of 310 to 103 to avoid an up or down vote on the resolution by referring it to the House Ethics Committee.  Some Republicans have blamed Mills’ alleging political maneuvering behind the scenes for the House’s failure Tuesday to censure Virgin Islands Delegate Stacey Plaskett over her texts with Jeffrey Epstein during a congressional hearing. Rep. Kat Cammack, R-Fla., posted on X after the Tuesday night vote on Plaskett that “A handful of Republicans took a dive on a vote to strip Stacy [sic] Plaskett of her position on House intel because of her ties to Epstein. They did it to protect a Republican facing his own ethics issues from a similar vote. This backroom deal s*** is swampy, wrong and always deserves to be called out.” Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, R-Fla., appeared to agree writing on X, “The Plaskett censure failed because house leadership exchanged that censure failure for the withdrawal of a vote to censure and refer Cory Mills to house ethics for investigation. The swamp protects itself.” Mills for his part denied participating in any backroom deal to avoid being punished by the chamber, stating on social media that he had expected to have a vote on his censure brought to the floor on Tuesday, which was also the day of the Plaskett vote. “There was no backroom deal, no negotiation, and no quid pro quo of any kind that would’ve forced the Democrats to stand down that vote against me,” Mills said in a statement, adding, “Anyone pushing that narrative is just wrong.” Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who has been unafraid to criticize Republican leadership in recent months along with fellow Republican lawmaker Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., decried the decision to refer the censure resolution to the House Ethics Committee. “Tonight I voted NO to refer the Cory Mills censure resolution to Ethics Committee because the House should vote yes or no to censure Cory Mills not continue to protect their own in secret committees,” Greene wrote on X. The Daily Signal has reached out to Mills’ office for comment. The House Committee on Ethics declined to comment. The post House Ethics Committee Announces It Is Investigating Congressman Cory Mills appeared first on The Daily Signal.

Texas Redistricting: The Most Scathing Denunciation of a Court Decision I’ve Ever Read
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Texas Redistricting: The Most Scathing Denunciation of a Court Decision I’ve Ever Read

On Tuesday, the media was filled with stories that a three-judge panel had voted 2-1 to issue a 160-page order blocking the Texas legislature’s new congressional redistricting plan.  The order claimed the redistricting was unlawfully based on race as opposed to partisanship—a claim at odds with what we all saw happen in the partisan political fight within the state legislature, which included a walkout by Democrat legislators.  What wasn’t attached to the order was the dissenting opinion by Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Jerry Smith, a 37-year veteran of the federal judiciary who is greatly respected for his legal acumen.  His 104-page dissent came out a day later and marks the most scathing denunciation I have ever read of another judge. In this case, the judge being denounced is Judge Jeffrey Vincent Brown, who wrote the majority decision, along with Judge David Guaderrama, who joined the opinion. In his dissent, Smith accused Brown and Guaderrama of “pernicious judicial misbehavior” in deliberately not providing Smith with “any reasonable opportunity” to review Brown’s opinion “and respond” before it was issued. Smith calls it “the most outrageous conduct by a judge that I have ever encountered in a case in which I have been involved.”  He spends four pages going through the timing involved and says that “any pretense of judicial restraint, good faith or trust by these two judges is gone.” Smith then starts off the substance of his dissenting opinion by acknowledging an undeniable fact: “The main winners from Judge Brown’s opinion are George Soros and Gavin Newsom.  The obvious losers are the People of Texas and the Rule of Law.”  Smith proceeds to totally dismantle the majority’s decision and its unsubstantiated claim that race, not politics, was the driving factor in the redistricting. Throughout,  he repeats the phrase “I dissent” more than a dozen times. Smith even includes two pages of “a non-exhaustive list of misleading, deceptive, or false statements Judge Brown put forward,” a very serious charge against a sitting judge Smith says the list “would be considerably longer but for the press of time; there’s no lack of fodder.” Smith apologizes for his dissent being “disjointed,” but says refining it was not possible because Brown and Guaderrama “have not allowed it.”  Thus, his dissent is “far from a literary masterpiece,” but if “there were a Noble Prize for Fiction, Judge Brown’s opinion would be a prime candidate.” According to Smith, Brown’s opinion is so deceptive and so lacking in facts or law that Brown could have “saved himself and the readers a lot of time and effort by merely stating the following”: I just don’t like what the Legislature did here.  It was unnecessary, and it seems unfair to disadvantaged voters. I need to step in to make sure wiser heads prevail over the nakedly partisan and racially questionable actions of these zealous lawmakers…I’m using my considerable clout as a federal district judge to put a stop to bad policy judgments.  After all, I get paid to do what I think is right. Brown’s actions are, Smith wrote, “the most blatant exercise of judicial activism” that he has “ever witnessed” during his lengthy judicial career. According to Smith, the main question before the three-judge panel was “whether the Texas Legislature did its mid-decade congressional redistricting to gain political advantage or, instead, because the main goal of Texas’s Republican legislators is to slash the voting rights of persons of color.” Smith likened the approach of the lawyers and witnesses in this case to that of Department of Justice lawyers from the Civil Rights Division in prior Texas redistricting cases: It was obvious, from the start, that the DoJ attorneys viewed state officials and the legislative majority and their staffs as a bunch of backwoods hayseed bigots who bemoan the abolition of the poll tax and pine for the days of literacy tests and lynchings.  And the DoJ layers saw themselves as an expeditionary landing party arriving here, just in time, to rescue the state from oppression. Having worked in the Civil Rights Division, I can assure you that his observation is absolutely 100% accurate. While acknowledging that the Justice Department was not present in this case, Smith said that “the same attitudes about Texas Republican legislators have been reflected in the testimony of multiple experts and witnesses presented by these plaintiffs and, occasionally…by their talented counsel and the statements of the parties.”  But the “obvious reason” for the Texas redistricting, Smith wrote, was “partisan gain.” The majority, he wrote, “commits grave error in concluding that the Texas Legislature is more bigoted than political.”  Smith methodically points out all of the grave errors Brown and Guaderrama made in evaluating the evidence in the case over what the legislators did and how and why the new districts were drawn the way they were.  Those errors are too numerous to list here. Smith’s conclusion that the majority committed “grave error” is the key legal standard for overturning a preliminary order. Texas has already filed an appeal with the Supreme Court.  Smith says the evidence in the case, as well as outside events, like the “victory lap in Houston to celebrate” by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, tell “you all you need to know – this is about partisan politics, plain and simple.”  Regardless “of one’s political slant, it’s obvious what Texas is trying to do in 2025,” obvious to everyone that is except the two judges who joined the majority opinion: The Republicans’ national margin in the House of Representatives is so slim that squeezing out a majority might even depend, day-to-day, on whether some seats are vacant because of deaths or resignations….The new plan [in Texas] was to make more seats winnable for Republicans by moving some Democrat incumbents from their districts and rendering other districts unwinnable by Democrats. Smith describes the plaintiffs’ theory—the one ultimately adopted by Brown—as “both perverse and bizarre.” They claimed that if politics was the reason for redistricting, then the Republicans would not “have drawn five” new seats, but instead would have drawn “six, seven, or eight additional seats and that the reason they did not is that the real reason” for the redistricting was “racial animus.”  The “absurdity of that notion speaks for itself,” Smith writes. Smith concludes his dissent by citing the unfairness the majority is imposing on “Texas voters who are having a map implemented by their duly elected legislature overturned by a self-aggrandizing, results-oriented court.”  He tells the Supreme Court that Brown’s order, “replete with legal and factual error, accompanied by naked procedural abuse, demands reversal.” With this decision, Smith writes, “darkness descends on the rule of law.” The post Texas Redistricting: The Most Scathing Denunciation of a Court Decision I’ve Ever Read appeared first on The Daily Signal.

McMahon Reveals Congress Interested in Huge Step To Dismantle Ed Department
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McMahon Reveals Congress Interested in Huge Step To Dismantle Ed Department

Secretary of Education Linda McMahon is talking to “dozens” of Congress members about codifying the Education Department’s biggest step toward extinction. The Daily Signal asked McMahon at Thursday’s press briefing if she was talking to members of Congress about her Tuesday announcement regarding moving certain functions of the department to other executive agencies. “We’ve been talking to talk to dozens of members of Congress to explain to them exactly what we’re doing, to bring them up to speed,” she said in response to a question from The Daily Signal, “and to say to them, ‘look, when we have completed some of these transfers that we that are working incredibly well, then we will be looking for Congress to codify those.'” NEW: @EDSecMcMahon is talking to "dozens of members of Congress" about codifying her plan to move certain ED functions to other agencies, she told @DailySignal. "We've been talking to talk to dozens of members of Congress to explain to them exactly what we're doing, to bring… pic.twitter.com/miZvnVZm9v— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) November 20, 2025 Education and Workforce Committee Chairman Tim Walberg, R-Mich., is one of the members of Congress McMahon has been in touch with, The Daily Signal has learned. “The chairman has always believed that the Department of Education can’t be completely dissolved without congressional approval—a notion that both President [Donald] Trump and Sec. McMahon have also stated,” House Education Committee communications director Audra George told The Daily Signal. “These interagency agreements are partnerships that will break up bureaucracy and improve the programs that Americans rely on. By harnessing the expertise of other agencies and relevant stakeholders we are empowering students, teachers, and parents.” Education officials announced new interagency agreements with four agencies. The office of elementary and secondary education, as well as the postsecondary education office, will move to the Labor Department. The agency’s Office of Indian Education will move to the Interior Department, and oversight of the Fulbright-Hays overseas research program and all of the government’s international education and foreign language initiatives will move to the State Department. The Department of Health and Human Services will take over campus child care access and foreign medical school accreditation program. Press secretary Karoline Leavitt called this a “significant step toward delivering on a core campaign promise to finally close the Department of Education, to shrink the bloated federal bureaucracy.” “This common sense action brings the Trump administration much closer to finally returning education where it belongs at the state and local level, not in Washington, D.C.,” she said. “The Democrats’ reckless 43-day government shutdown did manage to do one valuable thing,” she continued. “It proved that America does not need a federal Department of Education. During the longest shutdown in history, the Department of Education furloughed 90% of its staff, and America’s education system was not impacted whatsoever.” The post McMahon Reveals Congress Interested in Huge Step To Dismantle Ed Department appeared first on The Daily Signal.