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Inside War Secretary Pete Hegseth’s Trip to Singapore
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Inside War Secretary Pete Hegseth’s Trip to Singapore

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said American relations in the Indo-Pacific are stronger than ever after he crossed the ocean to meet with his counterparts in Singapore.  Hegseth spoke at the Shangri-La Dialogue conference, an Asia security summit, in Singapore, and held bilateral meetings with Indo-Pacific leaders on issues facing the region. The Daily Signal joined Hegseth in the press pool.  Hegseth landed in Singapore early Friday morning local time.  @SecWar is on the ground in Singapore for the Shangri-la Dialogue conference. He will be meeting with various Indo-Pacific leaders. Local time is 3:41 am. @DailySignal pic.twitter.com/I860CU3UO7— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 28, 2026 Friday  A few hours after landing, he jumped into physical training with American troops on the USS Boxer docked in Singapore.  Early morning PT with America’s bravest.Secretary of War Pete Hegseth kicks off his day by working out alongside U.S. troops aboard the USS Boxer while docked in Singapore. pic.twitter.com/R9bHcToBha— Fox News (@FoxNews) May 29, 2026 In the early afternoon, Hegseth met with Singapore’s Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, who welcomed him back to the country and acknowledged the United States has “many preoccupations,” including the situation in the Middle East. He added that the U.S. has “significant interest in this part of the world.” Hegseth responded that the U.S. is a “country with global obligations, but very much a focus in this region.”  Hegseth then commenced his meetings with regional leaders, starting with a bilateral meeting with Vietnam’s deputy prime minister and minister of national defense, Gen. Phan Van Giang. They discussed deepening the defense relationship and opportunities to expand cooperation in the maritime domain, including through unmanned capabilities.  .@SecWar begins his bilateral meeting with Vietnam’s General Secretary Lam and minister of defense. @DailySignal pic.twitter.com/mMncCRk1PL— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 29, 2026 Hegseth thanked Vietnam for being a stabilizing force in the region.  “We have a lot of ways we can build upon this partnership, which our defense teams have talked about with your leadership and the leadership of President [Donald] Trump,” Hegseth said, “that I think demonstrates to the world that two countries who just a few decades ago had differences look at the world today with mutual respect and respect for sovereignty and our people and commit to new paths forward in partnership and peace.”  Hegseth had several more meetings with his Malaysian and Thai counterparts before attending the Shangri-La opening dinner, where the president of Vietnam gave a keynote address.  Saturday Saturday began with Hegseth’s address to Shangri-La. He said Western Europe should learn from the United States’ relationship with Asia.  “We need partners, not protectorates,” he said. “We seek alliances built on shared responsibility, not dependency. This is the maturation of our alliances in a new era.”  NEW: @SecWar says Western Europe should learn from the United States’ relationship with Asia. “We need partners, not protectorates. We seek alliances built on shared responsibility, not dependency. This is the maturation of our alliances in a new era.” @DailySignal pic.twitter.com/AZWSraMmJ2— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 Hegseth acknowledged alarm about “China’s historic military buildup and the expansion of its military activities in the region and beyond.” He said the U.S. and Indo-Pacific nations share a “mutual understanding that a Pacific dominated by any hegemon would unwrap the regional balance of power and undermine people that were in it we all seek to preserve.” “The Department of War is working with the utmost focus to prevent any such unraveling,” he said.  “When we look across the region today, there is frightful alarm regarding China's historic military buildup and the expansion of its military activities in the region and beyond,” @SecWar says. “We share a clear-eyed assessment of that security environment. environment and a… pic.twitter.com/R88AQ3SqsJ— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 Hegseth said that U.S. relations with China are stronger than they’ve been in years, and Trump’s recent conversations with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing reinforced this.  But the dialogue between Xi and Trump is not “capitulation,” Hegseth said. Rather, it’s a “practical guardrail, ensuring the relationship our leaders seek at the top is preserved at every level,” he said. @SecWar said U.S. relations with China are stronger than they've been in years. Trump’s conversations with President Xi reinforced these goals, per Hegseth. “They agreed that the United States and China should build a constructive relationship of strategic stability based… pic.twitter.com/0BEwQhisTa— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 Hegseth then held meetings with his counterpart from the Philippines, Defense Minister Gilberto Teodoro, who praised Hegseth for his “very powerful speech,” which he said “made the intentions of the United States in this region clear.” “I believe our alliance has never been stronger as we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the mutual defense stream,” Hegseth said.  .@SecWar meets with his counterparts from the Philippines. “I believe our alliance has never been stronger as we celebrate the 75th anniversary of the mutual defense stream,” Hegseth says. The Filipino defense minister just praised Hegseth for his “very powerful speech.”… pic.twitter.com/lj2vEMIclf— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 Hegseth then met with defense chiefs from New Zealand and Japan before heading to the U.S. Embassy in Singapore for meetings with the AUKUS partners, an alliance of Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States formed in 2021 to counter China’s influence in the region by building up all the military capabilities of all three countries. Hegseth announced a new AUKUS agreement on unmanned undersea vehicles.  “The signature project will deliver a suite of highly adaptable multi-mission UUV payloads designed to support undersea operations and maintain our collective advantage in the maritime domain,” he said. NEW: @SecWar announces a new AUKUS agreement on unmanned undersea vehicles. “We think the review we undertook when we strengthened this partnership remains committed to the AUKUS partnership and is moving as quickly as possible to enhance our combined submarine presence in the… pic.twitter.com/YBnC7q6dlU— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 The United States “remains committed to the AUKUS partnership and is moving as quickly as possible to enhance our combined submarine presence in the Pacific region,” Hegseth added.  Before heading to the airport for the 20-hour flight back to Washington, D.C., Hegseth gave the Daily Signal an update on the war in Iran.  “Ultimately, like I said, any deal that the president is willing to make, he’s only going to make it if he believes it’s a great deal for our country and the security of the world, and only,” Hegseth said.  “Those goalposts haven’t shifted at all, which is the expectation of the American people, and what we’ve stated to Iran,” he added. “So, in the middle of negotiations, the closer they come to that reality, both now and into the future, the closer we’re going to get to that kind of a deal.” NEW: I asked @SecWar what he needs to see from Iran to make a deal. “Ultimately, like I said, any deal that the president is willing to make, he's only going to make it if he believes it's a great deal for our country and the security of the world, and only.”“Those goalposts…— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 He also told the Daily Signal the Trump administration’s policy on Taiwan hasn’t changed. After Trump’s Beijing visit, the president said he was undecided on sending arms to Taiwan, leading to speculation about whether the administration was departing from the United States’ historical stance on the country. “The policy we have on Taiwan is the same as it was at the beginning of this administration,” he said in response to the Daily Signal’s question. “The only change you might see is how we talk about the entirety of it.” .@SecWar just told @DailySignal the Trump admin’s policy on Taiwan hasn’t changed.“Our stance on Taiwan remains unchanged, just as the President said when we came out of those historic meetings with China, and I think we're as strong of a position as we've ever been in the… pic.twitter.com/N0VRHwu80J— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 “What I talked about today was strong, quiet, but clear, ensuring our allies know precisely where we stand,” he added, “whether it’s open in public or behind closed doors, and that’s why these meetings have been so important.” Hegseth also told the Daily Signal that the United States and China agreed in Beijing to keep talking about mutually agreed-upon guardrails on artificial intelligence. “You’ve got two things: You want to be able to set guardrails, but given the innovation capabilities of the United States of America, we also want to maintain an advantage and ensure that we can utilize that advantage responsibly as well. It’s emblematic of that competing tension,” he said. “Guardrail conversations are productive between two strong countries, but it’s also our job to run the fastest, and certainly at the War Department,” he said, “we’re trying to do everything we can to maintain that.” The press pool joined Hegseth on the flight back to Washington, where Hegseth landed at 4 a.m. Goodbye Singapore! pic.twitter.com/eVPOSU1Ihf— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 30, 2026 .@SecWar is back in D.C. after a long flight home from Singapore. pic.twitter.com/F6LbloMQBv— Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell (@TheElizMitchell) May 31, 2026

New Federal Plan Aims to Replace Synthetic Fabrics With American Cotton
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New Federal Plan Aims to Replace Synthetic Fabrics With American Cotton

The United States Department of Agriculture has launched the Great American Cotton Plan to support cotton farmers and protect Americans from “forever chemicals” in our daily lives. Over the past decade, America has moved to almost all synthetic fibers, often for clothing and linens made of plastics such as polyester, nylon, polypropylene, and polyethylene. While America has been propping up the Chinese plastic textile industry, American consumers have been wearing poisonous clothing, not supporting farmers, and shipping a majority of cotton exports to Brazil. Department of Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins calls the plan the “next step in the MAHA movement.” The Great American Cotton Plan is about one thing: Putting American cotton first again. Real “_____” wear cotton. Americans. Cowboys. Farmers. Families. MAHA. Because cotton is real, natural, American-grown, and made by U.S. farmers.Here’s the plan    Promote… pic.twitter.com/PkzvY9nHBb— Secretary Brooke Rollins (@SecRollins) May 28, 2026 “Supporting natural fibers like cotton also aligns with the Make America Healthy Again agenda as Americans grow increasingly concerned about microplastics and synthetic materials in everyday products,” Rollins said in a press release. The Department of Health and Human Services has been sounding the alarm on microplastics and “forever chemicals” for some time. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin recently pledged a $1 billion grant to detect and remove per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), chemicals known for their persistence in the environment. The substances are linked to cancer, infertility, and more. They are found in many consumer products, including clothes, and can persist in water and soil for decades. “Cotton is natural, breathable, biodegradable, and proudly grown by American farmers—not manufactured from petroleum-based plastics that can shed microplastics into our soil, water, and bodies,” Rollins continued. The Trump EPA strongly believes that NO American should be forced to pay out of their own pocket to clean up PFAS contamination that they are not responsible for causing. https://t.co/sQ0qKedKSl pic.twitter.com/FTl7KLuaUJ— Lee Zeldin (@epaleezeldin) May 27, 2026 This initiative will also benefit American cotton farmers, putting America first. Over the past decade, American cotton farmers have been in decline due to economic pressures. USDA predicts cotton producers could lose over $2.5 billion across 9 million planted acres during the next year. “Since 1607, cotton has helped build and sustain rural America. Our farmers grow some of the highest-quality cotton in the world, but over the last several years America’s cotton growers have been crushed by rising costs, unfair foreign competition, and a flood of cheap synthetic products,” Rollins said. The initiative will work to promote domestic cotton production by partnering with HHS to promote plants over plastic, encouraging consumers to buy American cotton products. It will also work to promote domestic demand by partnering with Congress to support the bipartisan Buying American Cotton Act. It also aims to improve trade in textile countries like Indonesia and Bangladesh, and it will support farmers as they encounter farming hardships such as the spread of pests and rising seed costs. Sen. Katie Britt, R-Ala., took to social media to celebrate the plan, vowing to continue supporting American cotton in Congress.Reps. David Rouzer, R-N.C., and Juan Ciscomani, R-Ariz., also pledged their support. “The Trump Administration is committed to ensuring American cotton once again becomes the fiber of choice with the Great American Cotton Plan—a bold effort to restore profitability for cotton producers, strengthen rural economies, rebuild domestic textile manufacturing, and bring American cotton back into the products families use every day,” Rollins said.

DOJ Abides by Weaponization Fund Ruling, Likely Easing Senate Gridlock
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DOJ Abides by Weaponization Fund Ruling, Likely Easing Senate Gridlock

The Department of Justice has chosen to abide by a federal judge’s block on an “Anti-Weaponization Fund” created as part of a settlement agreement in President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in a move that could clear the way for passing a major border security funding bill. The $1.77 billion fund was meant to “provide a systematic process to hear and redress claims of others who suffered weaponization and lawfare,” per the DOJ. “This Fund was open to anybody who was so weaponized, targeted, or persecuted, whether they were Democrat, Republican, Conservative, Independent, or otherwise,” the DOJ wrote in a statement Monday, expressing disagreement but adding it “will abide by the Court’s ruling.” In May, senators left Washington, D.C., after failing to agree on a party-line budget bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security immigration enforcement agencies for the rest of Trump’s administration. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection have not received funding via the typical bipartisan process after the longest ever shutdown of the agency, in which Democrats refused to fund the agencies without Congress enacting restraints on them. Republicans are attempting to pass a budget reconciliation bill to fund the agencies, a legislative process which allows the Senate to enact sweeping budgetary changes with a simple majority. Among the sources of Republican discontent in the Senate was widespread disagreement with the DOJ over the Anti-Weaponization Fund. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., called the fund “stupid on stilts,” expressing his opposition to the idea of paying those who entered the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. GOP Senator Thom Tillis on Trump’s proposed “Anti-Weaponization” fund: “I think it’s stupid on stilts. When you take money from me to give to a purpose I vehemently disagree with, that’s tyranny.” pic.twitter.com/PLa2vvxzDN— TheBlaze (@theblaze) May 21, 2026 “People are concerned about paying their mortgage or rent, affording groceries, and paying for gas, not about putting together a $1.8 billion fund for the president and his allies to pay whomever they wish with no legal precedent or accountability,” Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La, said. Although the fund was wholly unrelated to the bill, reconciliation offers Democrats the opportunity to introduce infinite amendments, meaning the minority could use the process to target the fund. Proceeding to a reconciliation bill triggers a “vote-a-rama” in the Senate, wherein Democrats are sure to force Republicans into politically uncomfortable votes and attempt to take advantage of intraparty divisions. Ultimately, the Senate punted on the process, choosing to proceed to their recess without having advanced a bill. On Monday, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., announced in a letter his intention to target the fund on the Senate floor, making it clear it remained politically explosive. “This week, Senate Democrats will launch a coordinated effort to kill the slush fund before one cent goes out the door. And no matter what Republicans do, we will force them to vote,” Schumer wrote in the letter. The Department of Justice disagrees strongly with the decision on the Anti-Weaponization Fund put forth by the United States District Court Judge in the Eastern District of Virginia, wherein the Court stated that, under no circumstances, may the Department of Justice proceed with…— U.S. Department of Justice (@TheJusticeDept) June 1, 2026 He added, “If Republicans return to reconciliation, we will be ready with amendments to shut the fund down.” Whatever bill the Senate is able to advance, they would also need to pass through the House’s narrow majority in order to get it to the president’s desk. With a razor-thin majority, House Republican leadership could afford few defections on a party-line vote. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, R-Pa., has already signaled his opposition to the fund. “Bad news. We’re going to try to kill it,” he said in May of the fund. The president met with Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., on Monday. Later, Axios reported that the White House was planning to abandon the fund in order to ensure the passage of a reconciliation bill. A federal judge had temporarily blocked the fund on Friday. The DOJ soon thereafter announced it would abide by the judge’s ruling. Related PostsThune Stalls DHS Funding Bill Again, Sending Congress HomeThe long-stalled Department of Homeland Security immigration funding bill unexpectedly stalled again Thursday afternoon. Senate Majority Leader John Thune delayed the vote until after the long weekend and the even longer recess, missing President Donald Trump’s June 1 deadline. On Tuesday, Thune told the press that senators were going to vote this week on the…Senate GOP Leaders Pull a Bait-and-Switch With Reconciliation 3.0Conservatives have every right to feel betrayed by the Republican Congress’ recent antics. Free marketeers, from the U.S. House to homes across America, were told in April to accept Senate Republican Leader John Thune’s emaciated Reconciliation 2.0 bill. The South Dakotan employed a limited-use budget procedure that obviates that pesky 60-vote filibuster threshold and permits passage via simple…Is the Government Still Funding the Immigration Industrial Complex? Trump Wants AnswersIs the federal government still funneling taxpayer dollars to some of the leftist activist groups that called the shots during President Joe Biden’s administration? The Trump White House is asking federal agencies to investigate past and potentially continuing funding for a host of nonprofits, many of which are associated with aggressive promotion of leftist causes….

The ‘Wrinkle’ in LA Democrats’ Plans
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The ‘Wrinkle’ in LA Democrats’ Plans

Editor’s note: This is a lightly edited transcript of today’s video from Daily Signal Senior Contributor Victor Davis Hanson. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to see more of his videos. Hello, this is Victor Davis Hanson for the Daily Signal.   This Tuesday, June 2, there are many national, state, and local races throughout the country. Here in California, we’re looking at the governor’s race to see if Steve Hilton can pull off an upset against Xavier Becerra and Tom Steyer and others, but especially the Los Angeles mayor’s race.  Usually, we don’t look at these races very carefully in California, or indeed any blue state, because they’re shoo-ins for Democrat candidates. But this one’s a little different for a variety of reasons.   Right now, in this huge field, there are three candidates. One, nominally Republican, although at times he’s been an independent, Spencer Pratt, with no prior political experience.  He was a real TV star a few years ago. And then there’s the incumbent mayor, Karen Bass, and a city councilman, City Councilman [Nithya] Raman. And they’re all polling variously between 21 and 25 percent, which suggests the race now is among those three.  Ostensibly, again ostensibly, Bass and Raman have the advantage because Los Angeles has flipped from a once conservative city in the 1960s and ’70s to radically left due to immigration and outmigration.  But there’s a little wrinkle to it. Pratt’s not really identifiable as a MAGA Republican, and he’s not talking about national issues. He’s talking about local issues.   So although he suffers from the reality that conservatives are not liked in Los Angeles, he’s running against two far-left candidates who may in fact split the vote.  Now, the polls themselves are problematic because of two things. One, as we learned in the 2024 race when the Harvard, NPR, or the Harris NPR poll the night before the balloting began in person said that Kamala Harris would win beyond the margin of error—that would be 4%—and of course, she lost by 1.5%.  They were 5.5%. We got the suspicion that many of those polls were designed to create momentum. So the polls that show Bass or Raman ahead, I think, would show bias.   But on the other hand, as you can see from some of Spencer Pratt’s online commercials, there’s a sense that it’s socially and culturally unacceptable in LA among many people on the Left to say that you would even consider voting for Spencer Pratt.  In other words, if somebody calls you up on the phone and asks who you’re going to vote for, and given our suspicion of surveillance and intrusion of our personal data, a lot of people won’t answer the question, or they’ll say that they’re not going to vote for Pratt because it’s socially unacceptable.  But we do know one thing about the polls. Pratt was down at 8% to 10%—and now he’s roughly equal with Raman and Bass themselves. Why is that? Because Bass is an incumbent, and her record is utterly indefensible.  She wouldn’t allow people to clean the hillsides of Los Angeles during the high-wind period, when the ground is dry and the winds are up from the ocean, and that’s when fires take place.   Where was she? She was in [Ghana]. Why? Who knows? A personal matter, a wedding of a friend, something.  The vice mayor was being detained for phoning in a bomb threat. The water and power woman was incompetent. She had been paid $700,000. A reservoir that would have saved the Palisades was empty. The fire hydrants wouldn’t work.  I could go on and on. And when you look at the homeless problem, that she spent billions of dollars, maybe as many as $85,000 per homeless person, it’s gotten no better, if not worse. MacArthur Park is an open drug den. Housing is still unaffordable. The downtown has been wrecked. People are leaving offices.  Law firms are leaving their offices. It’s a mess. Everything about Los Angeles is a mess. And this was a vibrant city in the ’80s and at the millennium, where the downtown was reinvigorated. It was booming, and Los Angeles was eclipsing even San Francisco. And that has not happened. It’s a mess. And that’s what Pratt is running on. He’s not running on the border. He’s not running on immigration. He’s not running on Iran. He’s not running on communism or not. What he is saying is these people are ideologues.  He has two parts of his message. You cannot afford to live in Los Angeles. Gasoline is too high, food is too high, and especially housing—whether you own the house or you rent it—is too high.  Los Angeles is not a safe place. Why is it not safe? Because until recently, the public attorneys, the district attorneys in LA County, were letting people out without cash bail. No cash, just get out. Police arrest them, they were returned, and that destroyed all deterrence. Taxes were too high. Too many regulations.  So the Palisades has been burned for over a year. It’s not even beginning to be rebuilt. Why? Because either there are too many regulations in general, or the Left has had ideological dreams that this is a golden opportunity to take one of the most picturesque and beautiful communities in the United States before the fire and turn it into a social lab experience of high density—who knows—high-rises, a subway coming in, or something.  They have all these European ideas about how the Palisades would work under the rubric of affordable housing. Something, though, is going on because the momentum right now—if the election was held in two weeks—Spencer Pratt would win, I think.  I don’t know if he’d get a 51 percent majority in the primaries, but he would probably beat Karen Bass. And why is that? Because they haven’t heard any viable, logical, rational defense when she’s on television or she tries to defend herself.  She’s worried about what? Meth people who ingest dangerous drugs might have poor teeth, and that’s something that she’s going to address, I suppose, when people who don’t take meth and pay for their own dentistry don’t have a house, or they’re assaulted with impunity by criminals.  She’s not worried about those people. And remember, she was a person who, a dozen or more times as a student and a young person, went to [Fidel] Castro’s Cuba to show her solidarity.  But what’s going on is people of all different stripes—Republican, Democrat, independent—are saying that this is a dysfunctional society, and it’s a dysfunctional society because this blue-state, blue-city model doesn’t work.  This is not the Democratic Party of Bill Clinton. It has no familiarity, no resemblance to what the Democrats were saying at their national conventions in 1992 and 1996.   This is a dysfunctional, dystopian city. And if we don’t do something about it, even in the unlikely guise of a former reality TV star, at least he is offering concrete solutions to concrete problems.  And finally, there’s one last tweak to this story. He has friends who are brilliant. I’m not suggesting that he’s authorizing or paying for them, but the artificial intelligence commercials that are coming out have really revolutionized political campaigning.  It’s almost as if you don’t have to pay a million dollars to cut a video commercial. You can get people in their garages with laptops who can do a much better job. They’re funny. They’re caricatures. And they explain in large part his grassroots insurgent campaign.  So besides his unorthodox style and his eccentric idea that we’re not going to talk about politics, we’re going to talk about solutions, he’s campaigning in a different way.  And when he shows up in the inner city, in predominantly Black and Hispanic neighborhoods, that message resonates—resonates in a way that defies DEI conventionality. He’s saying to the people, the subtext: I’m not a DEI candidate. The two DEI candidates play to racial or ethnic solidarity. I don’t.  I play to you as humans who share human problems with everybody, regardless of how they look. Who knows? That might be a winning message for a change.  We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of the Daily Signal.

DOJ Says ‘Discriminatory and Obstructionist Policies’ in These Blue States Endanger ICE Agents
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DOJ Says ‘Discriminatory and Obstructionist Policies’ in These Blue States Endanger ICE Agents

Four blue states are putting federal agents in danger in an effort to hinder immigration enforcement, a Justice Department action contends. On Monday, days after a Justice Department lawsuit, Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek, a Democrat, ordered state agencies to continue denying undercover license plates to Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. This marks one of the latest federal-state conflicts in which blue-state governors have vowed to resist President Donald Trump’s policies. In lawsuits filed late last week against the states of Maine and Massachusetts on the East Coast and against the states of Washington and Oregon on the West Coast, the Justice Department alleges that state policies denying confidential license plates to federal agents are unconstitutional. The lawsuits allege that the state policies threaten the operational effectiveness and safety of federal agents who have faced targeted harassment across the country. The complaints further assert that if an agent can’t use undercover plates—as state and local law enforcement do—criminals can track and evade federal law enforcement. However, Kotek said that Oregon’s decades-old sanctuary policy prevents the state’s Department of Motor Vehicles from cooperating with federal authorities for the purpose of immigration enforcement. The Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles temporarily paused disbursing new undercover license plates to all federal agencies beginning April 15, pending a review of compliance with state law. State and local law enforcement were unaffected by this pause, and the federal agencies that participated in the program could continue to use their existing unexpired plates. Kotek on Monday announced the state should permanently stop providing undercover plates to immigration enforcement agents but will resume issuing plates to federal agencies that don’t primarily conduct immigration enforcement. Her directive also said the state will maintain regular undercover plate access for state and local law enforcement, which has continued and remains unaffected by this action. “ICE agents have repeatedly engaged in illegitimate activities, causing unwarranted chaos, sowing fear, and damaging the relationship between law enforcement and our communities,” Kotek said in a Monday statement. “Oregon will follow state law and ensure we do not aid these unlawful immigration enforcement efforts.” Federal law enforcement officers should be able to carry out their duties effectively, said Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche. “By denying undercover license plates to DHS components, including ICE, while issuing them to their own state agencies, these governors are pursuing discriminatory and obstructionist policies against federal law enforcement,” Blanche said in a May 28 public statement. “These actions undermine federal immigration enforcement, allow dangerous criminals to escape justice, and terrorize American communities.” Before the lawsuits, Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate sent letters to the states. He called the policies “dangerous, shameful, and unconstitutional.” Some states are refusing to issue license plates to federal law enforcement. It’s dangerous, shameful, and unconstitutional. It needs to stop now. Under @DAGToddBlanche, this @TheJusticeDept stands with our brave law enforcement officers. pic.twitter.com/iosUHx0mzK— Brett Shumate (@AAGShumate) May 13, 2026 However, Washington Attorney General Nicholas W. Brown replied in a May 22 letter that his state provides “hundreds of undercover plates to federal agencies each year,” including to the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Marshals Service, and the U.S. Secret Service. “The implication in your letter that Washington is denying undercover plates to all federal agencies and thereby potentially hampering federal criminal investigations into terrorism, fraud, and more is simply wrong,” Brown wrote. “Your letter is also wrong on the law. You suggest that Washington must issue undercover plates to all federal agencies without exception. But under the Tenth Amendment and fundamental principles of federalism, Washington may choose whether to provide state resources to assist with federal programs.” Attorneys general offices in Maine and Massachusetts, which will be defending the states against the Justice Department lawsuits, did not respond to inquiries from the Daily Signal for this story. Last week in response to the lawsuit, Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey said, “We are not going to use state resources to help ICE operate in secret, and without accountability, while refusing to provide basic information about who they are arresting and why.” Shumate said in announcing the lawsuits, “The Department of Justice will steadfastly protect the operational effectiveness and safety of law enforcement from these unconstitutional state policies.”