Author: greenecodemocratcom

  • Newswire : Rep. Terri Sewell leads 54 Democrats asking for answers on Argentina $20 Billion bailout

    Congresswoman Terri Sewell (D AL-7)

    By Alabama Political Reporter

    Democrats questioned the Treasury secretary about the Trump administration’s $20 billion bailout of Argentina, citing concerns about election influence and farmer impact.

    Ways and Means Oversight Subcommittee Ranking Member Terri A. Sewell, D-Alabama; Trade Subcommittee Ranking Member Linda T. Sánchez, D-California; and 54 of their Democratic colleagues Monday called on Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to provide answers regarding the Trump administration’s $20 billion bailout of Argentina.

    The members expressed concerns that the bailout is an inappropriate use of U.S. taxpayer funds to influence Argentina’s upcoming election in favor of President Trump’s political ally, Argentine President Javier Milei. They also highlighted the bailout’s impact on American farmers, particularly soybean producers, and a potential conflict of interest involving a close associate of the Trump administration who stands to financially benefit from the arrangement. President Trump also suggested Monday that the U.S. government would purchase beef from Argentina.

    “President Trump and his administration is once again selling out the American people to help his wealthy friends and political allies,” said Ranking Member Sewell. “Billions of Americans’ taxpayer dollars are being sent to support the political prospects of Argentine President Javier Milei while President Trump continues to try to strip away healthcare from millions of working families in the U.S. The American people deserve answers.”

    The members wrote in part, “President Trump has explicitly conditioned the bailout on the electoral success in this month’s elections of President Milei’s party. The U.S. Treasury’s authorities to address international financial crises, which are meant for situations that present a genuine U.S. national interest, should not be used to influence elections abroad. In this regard, President Trump has not only conditioned the loan on President Milei’s electoral prospects, but he has also noted that the United States will not benefit from the bailout.

    The members continued, “Due to the Trump Administration’s failed trade policy, China purchased almost no American soybeans from May to August of this year. As American farmers struggle, Brazil has set records in its soybean exports to China and Argentina is following suit after capitalizing on the Trump administration’s promise of a bailout. American farmers need relief. American farmers need restored market access.”

    Full text of the letter is available on Rep. Sewell’s website

     

  • Newswire : Project 2025’s mastermind Russell Vought Is ‘Running the Country’—and Black America Is paying the Price

    Russell Vought

    By Stacy M. Brown
Black Press USA Senior National Correspondent

    ProPublica’s in-depth investigation reveals that Russell Vought, Donald Trump’s former budget director, is the real power inside this White House. Vought is the principal author of Project 2025, a racist and authoritarian blueprint that reshapes government around a single goal: to make America a white Christian nation.

    While Trump holds the title of president, it is Vought who drives policy, using the machinery of government to wage war on equality and democracy. ProPublica’s reporting shows that Vought has consolidated power through the Office of Management and Budget, controlling federal spending, freezing funds, and shutting down entire agencies. He has used his position to block aid for the poor, cancel education programs, and dismantle health and environmental protections that serve Black and brown communities.

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  • Newswire : Trump bulldozes through the White House to build Grand Ballroom

     Demolition of East Wing of White House to construct ballroom

    By April Ryan, NNPA White House Correspondent

     


    President Trump is unnerved that people in the Treasury Building across from the East Wing of the White House have been taking pictures of the demolition project for his 90,000 ft.² ballroom.

    The optics (https://www.instagram.com/reel/DQDTf2ElX-w/?igsh=cGp4NzFyMjY4azcw) of the White House are forever changed as demolition and construction workers begin construction worth $250 million and allegedly funded through private donations. President Trump never received permission to participate in this project. The last time he officially received authorization for an escalation was during his first term working on the Tennis courts on the White House complex.

    The last major construction on the White House was in the 1940s; however, according to the president, this venue will hold 999 people. He currently says only 88 people can fit in the East Room of the White House.
    The bulldozing demolition effort has not considered the history of the building’s walls, windows, or other parts. It is uncertain what will remain of the East Wing, which also houses the presidential movie theater.
    Speaking with a White House Historical Association source, Rosalynn Carter was the First Lady to have an office in the White House in the East Wing. She established the First Lady’s office on the East Wing’s second Floor. President Thomas Jefferson was the first to propose wings for the White House and introduce the colonnade.

  • Newswire : Private data tells the story Washington won’t: Jobs are disappearing

    By: Jason Roberts and Stacy M. Brown, NNPA

     

    With the federal government shutdown grinding on, the nation’s economic picture is collapsing into silence and uncertainty. For the first time in decades, there is no official monthly employment report from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — the same agency many now say can no longer be trusted after the White House moved to control its data release following a weak jobs report earlier this year. In the vacuum, private firms have stepped forward with independent analyses that show the country losing jobs and faith at the same time.
    ADP’s National Employment Report  found that private-sector employers shed 32,000 jobs in September, reversing the modest gains of the summer. Annual pay for job-stayers rose 4.5 percent, showing that wages are inching up even as hiring slows. “Despite the strong economic growth we saw in the second quarter, this month’s release further validates what we’ve been seeing in the labor market — that U.S. employers have been cautious with hiring,” said Dr. Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist. The ADP data showed the heaviest losses in manufacturing, construction, and professional services, with small and medium-sized companies suffering the steepest cuts. The Midwest lost 63,000 jobs, and gains in the West could not offset the slide.

    Bank of America’s Institute Employment Report reinforced that picture, finding “a continued cooling of the labor market.” Its data showed a 10 percent year-over-year rise in unemployment payments made to customer accounts, nearly double the most recent increase reported by the government before the shutdown. Lower-income workers continue to trail others, with after-tax wage growth of just 1.4 percent compared with 4.0 percent for higher-income households.

    Goldman Sachs produced its own estimate after the Labor Department was forced to halt publication. The investment bank calculated that initial claims for unemployment benefits rose to 224,000 in the week ending September 27, up from 218,000 a week earlier. The number of people receiving benefits slipped slightly to 1.91 million, using state-level data and seasonal adjustments that were pre-released before the shutdown.

    Reuters reported that the Chicago Federal Reserve used private “real-time” indicators to estimate the national unemployment rate at 4.3 percent, though without federal verification, that figure is uncertain.

    Global investment firm Carlyle also stepped in, releasing its own economic indicators drawn from its portfolio of 277 companies and nearly 730,000 employees. Carlyle estimated that U.S. employers added only 17,000 jobs in September and that real private residential construction spending declined 2.5 percent, even as business investment rose 4.8 percent, driven by technology and artificial intelligence projects. “Corporate spending, particularly in technology and AI infrastructure, continues to power growth while household consumption ends the quarter on a high note,” said Jason Thomas, Carlyle’s Head of Global Research and Investment Strategy.

    Yet while private analysts fill the gap left by a silenced federal government, the shutdown’s impact on workers and families has become its most defining consequence.

    A newly revealed memo from the Office of Management and Budget claims that federal workers forced into furlough during the ongoing shutdown may not receive back pay once the ordeal ends. In open defiance of the law, the administration argues that the 2019 Government Employee Fair Treatment Act does not automatically guarantee wages to workers sent home or ordered to labor without compensation.
    The government that once promised fairness has now declared that those who serve it may be discarded. This is not confusion. It is control. Mark Paoletta, the administration’s top lawyer at the budget office, wrote that Congress must pass new legislation to authorize those payments. His reasoning is what one former Republican official called “clearly against its intent.” In other words, the government rewrote the law to justify punishing the very people who keep it running.
    President Trump offered no compassion, only contempt. “It depends on who we’re talking about,” he said when asked if furloughed workers would receive back pay. “There are some people who really don’t deserve to be taken care of, and we’ll take care of them in a different way.” Those words echo not from a leader, but from a ruler measuring human worth as though it were a currency. Across the country, millions now live the consequences of those words. Families of federal workers stare at empty refrigerators — the most recent estimate revealed that more than 49,000 District residents, or 13 percent, are federally employed — and rent notices pile up. CNN reported that many workers will receive smaller paychecks this week, the last they may see until the shutdown ends. What kind of democracy weaponizes hunger against its own citizens?
    The administration’s defiance also contradicts its own Office of Personnel Management, which stated that “employees who were furloughed as a result of the lapse will receive retroactive pay for those furlough periods” once the shutdown ends. But this White House does not deal in law; it deals in loyalty. It rewards obedience and punishes dissent. It governs by threat and humiliation. And as the government remains closed and official data suppressed, America’s workers — both public and private — are left to piece together their own picture of a country in economic and moral decline.

  • Newswire : A Supreme Court fight over Voting Rights

    Attorney Janai Nelson, President NAACP-LDF

    By April Ryan, NNPA White House Correspondent

     

    Janai Nelson, President of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and Head of Counsel for the organization, argued before the U.S. Supreme Court last Wednesday for the civil rights stance of leaving Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act untouched. Spencer Overton, a professor at George Washington University, was in the High Court when the arguments took place over Louisiana v Callais.

    Overton proudly emphasized that “Jaina [Nelson] was basically like Bruce Lee taking on everybody.” Overton, an expert on redistricting, said, “Six of the nine justices were coming for Jaina. “She was taking on many arguments, “she’s got three different parties, the state of Louisiana (https://www.instagram.com/reel/DP1b5c7iDq_/?igsh=aTV1aWtrbnl5c2Mz), the Trump administration, and the so-called non-Black plaintiffs, the Callais plaintiffs.”

    The core of the argument is that race is a factor in the second Black district in Louisiana out of its six districts. White residents have claimed it is unconstitutional and reverse racism to have that second district. Opponents of Voting Rights questioned whether creating the second Black Louisiana district violates the 14th or 15th Amendment. They also wondered whether the affirmative action ban justifies striking down Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. “They’re all arguing against her [Janai Nelson], so she’s there, and you know she did a great job. I can’t see anyone doing a better job with what she had to work with,” added Overton.
    She argued that the nation should “stay with the current doctrine, which has been working for 40 years.” Former head of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, Mary Frances Berry, gave her analysis on the court session stating, “From the justices responses to the oral arguments, looks like Chief Justices Roberts will win his crusade to get rid of efforts to use the law to provide equal justice for Blacks- meaning the conservative majority gets rid of districts created by states to govern Black voters the right to vote for the candidates of their choice.
    “Blunt in her assessment, Berry added, “It also means that Republicans can draw maps in such a way to create more congressional districts to stay in power for the foreseeable future.” The expectation is that the Supreme Court will decide on redistricting Louisiana in January or February to give states time to make changes before the 2026 elections.
    Civil Rights organizations believe that this type of decision could have a crippling effect on the 2026 midterm election process. If Republicans win, it will affect about 20 members of the Congressional Black Caucus and lawmakers representing Hispanic districts.
    Eric Holder, the Obama administration’s Attorney General, issued a written statement on the severity of this attack on the right to vote: “In the midst of the greatest attack on the right to vote since Jim Crow, our nation’s highest tribunal and other courts must protect this most vital of rights. The Court must make it clear that violating the voting rights of American citizens will not be tolerated, and it must do so by permanently reinstating Louisiana’s Voting Rights Act-compliant map.”
    In 2013, a Supreme Court case bearing Eric Holder’s name, Shelby V. Holder, was the first significant attack to begin gutting the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act.

  • No Kings Rally in Selma, Alabama, one of 15 in Alabama, one of 2,700 nationwide, attract 7 million people opposed to Trump’s authoritarianism

    The photos above are of the “No King’s Rally” in Selma, Alabama on Saturday, October 18, 2025. Over 100 protestors in Selma, at the foot of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, joined millions nationwide in opposing the authoritarian, dictatorial, un-Constitutional and immoral policies of the Trump-Vance Administration.

  • Eutaw City Council holds regular meeting on October 14, 2025, dealing with routine matters

    The Eutaw City Council held its regular meeting on October 14, which is likely to be the second to last meeting presided over by Mayor Latasha Johnson as her four-year term comes to a close at the end of the month.
    The meeting was fairly routine in approving required city business matters but not tackling new initiatives, policies or programs. The Council tabled a budget for the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2025, since most of the expenditures will be made in the initial months of the next mayor’s administration. Even though the budget was listed as a draft budget for the 25-26 Fiscal Year, the council members did not want to encumber the plans of the new Administration with a budget that it would have to change.
    At the end of the meeting, it was announced that the inauguration of the new Mayor, Corey Cockrell, and the five council members, would be held on Monday November 3rd, at 10:00 A.M., on the grounds of the Old Greene County Courthouse, in downtown Eutaw, Alabama.
    The Council also heard a report from Travis Boyd of the Servpro Corporation about alterations and repairs to the gym portion of the Robert H. Young Community Center, the former Carver School. The report includes removing toxic substances, such as lead paint and asbestos from the facility. The Servpro representatives gave their report to the council members to review. In the public meeting, the company representatives never spoke to the specifics of their financial proposal for the rehabilitation of the building.
    Richard Harbin of Harbin and Stough CPA firm, made a preliminary report on their audit report for Fiscal Year 2024-25, which ended September 30, 2025. Harbin said, “ Mayor Johnson has done a good job of recording the financial records of the city. She is leaving the city in good financial shape. She has helped the city to get several grants including a large one of over $3.6 million from ADEM, for water and sewer improvements for the cities of Eutaw and Boligee that jointly share in the system,” said Harbin. He said it would take some additional time to complete the audit due to accounting for the State of Alabama Retirement System which covers city employees, audit testing of accounts and payments and writing an opinion.
    In other business, the Eutaw City Council:
    • Approved a Resolution to create a bank account to hold funds from currency seized from lawbreakers.
    • Approved City Attorney Zane Willingham, writing a letter to Mayor Johnson concerning her disposition of city property without council approval.
    • Approved City Attorney Zane Willingham to send Trevaris Truman a certified letter for the return of $4,975 in funds for a clean-up contract he never started.
    • Approver registration, travel and per diem for Councilwoman-elect, Carrie Logan, to attend an orientation training for newly elected officials in Dothan, Alabama on November 12 and 13.
    • Received a report from City Clerk Sha’kelvia Spencer, on using Mills Tax Service for providing bookkeeping and payroll services for the city.
    • Approved donation of $250 to Greene County Children’s Policy Council for Halloween Festival.
    • Approved getting a Public Official Bond of $100,000 for Mayor-elect Corey Cockrell and other city officials.
    • Approved renewal of Notary Bond for City Clerk and Water clerk; and purchase of two overnight deposit from Merchants and Farmer’s Bank for deposit of city and water funds.
    • Approved reimbursement of Police Officer Tyler Johnson for $45.06 for motor oil for patrol car.
    • Removed item from the agenda to designate the 4th Saturday in August, to honor John and Carol Zippert, for work on the Black Belt Folk Roots Festival for fifty years.
    • Approved the appointment of Pamela Hamilton to the Greene County Ambulance Board.
    • Supported a Work Session to review the rental agreement for city buildings, and other facilities, including increasing the fees for clean-up costs.
    • Approved payment of Monthly bills.

  • School Board engages in Whole Board Training; holds meeting with interim superintendent

    The Greene County Board of Education met in regular session, Monday, October 20, 2025 which was also the first meeting engaging the Interim Superintendent Mr. Darryl Aikerson. The board hired Aikerson, September 24, 2025 on a contractual basis. All board members were present. The board also held its annual Whole Board Training, which is a state requirement for all board members. The Alabama Association of School Boards (AASB) conducted the training on the process of searching and selecting a school system superintendent. All board members attended, except Ms. Veronica Richardson.
    As his report to the board, Superintendent Aikerson scheduled Curriculum Coordinator, Mrs. Barbara Martin and Maintenance Supervisor, Mrs. Sharon Hardwick to present updates on their administrative areas.
    Mrs. Martin’s presentation focused on three components: Curriculum and Instruction; At-Risk Multi-Tiered System of Support; Testing and Accountability. Her report included the following: ensuring explicit and systematic instruction daily; benchmark assessment provided to students; ensuring all aspects of the Literacy Act and Numeracy Act are implemented; digital literacy is a major part of the instructional process; problem solving teams are utilized; after-school and summer learning opportunities are provided.
    Mrs. Hardwick’s Maintenance Report focused on current projects at each school facility. Outsourced projects at Eutaw Primary include duct cleaning; leak in front driveway and repair to suppression system. Robert Brown projects include awaiting new part for the elevator; installation of shades; fire alarm inspection. Greene County High: flooring issue near gym; track & field in progress; fire hydrants back on line. At Peter J. Kirksey, there is a leak underground. Greene County Water Department is assisting. Repair and/or replace HVAÇ units in Central Office.
    The board approved the following personnel items recommended by the superintendent.
    Employment: Canesha Ray Williams – Long-term substitute, Greene County High School; Adrienne Davis – Substitute Bus Aide.
    Additional Service Contracts 2025 – 2026 for the following employees at Greene County High School: (Separate Contract): Akeem Tyree – Assistant Basketball Coach; Devin Woods – Head Baseball Coach.
    Catastrophic sick leave for Carl Oliver, Lead Maintenance.
    Greene County School District After-School Tutorial Program 2025-2026:
    Eutaw Primary School: Carla Durrett-Reading Coach; Pamela Pasteur-Kindergarten; Elona Washington-1st Grade; Angela Hill-2nd Grade; Keisha Williams-3rd Grade; LaShaun Henley-3rd Grade; Carolyn Daniels-Special Services; Mary Hobson-Paraprofessional.
    Robert Brown Middle School: Vanessa Bryant-4th Grade; Demetris Lyles-5th Grade; Naomi Cyrus-6th Grade; Sylvia Williams-7th & 8th Grade; Raven Bryant-Special Services; Dorothea Childs-Special Services Paraprofessional; Pinkie Travis-Paraprofessional; Felecia Smith-Math Coach.
    Bus Drivers & Aide: Stanley Lucious; Natasha Lewis; Gerald Holloway; George Pippen; Johnnie Pelt; James Gaines; Jerdin Gray; Marsha Powell – Aide.
    The board approved the following administrative items recommended by the superintendent.
    * Capital Plan – Five Year Plan for the Greene County School System.
    * Agreement between Greene County Board of Education and Lucy Reyes for Special Education translator services for the 2025 – 2026 school year at a rate of $30.00 per hour, with a minimum of 2 hours per session.
    * Bid from Pruett Oil Company to provide petroleum products for the 2025 – 2026 school year (Only Bidder).
    * Quote from ClearWinds for Chromebook Repair Service in the amount of $32,400 (yearly renewal).
    * Payment of all bills, claims, and payroll.
    * Out-of-state travel for students and chaperones to attend The Bodies Human Exhibit in Gatlinburg, TN on December 3, 2025.
    Renewal of two Certificates of Deposit (CDs) at Merchants & Farmers Bank for the Greene County Career Center, updating the interest rate from 0.95% to 4.17% (13 Month rate) First CD – Maturity Date October 31, 2025 – $2,141.23; Second CD – Maturity Date – November 11, 2025 – $1,962.74.
    CSFO, Mrs. Marquita Lennon informed the board there would not be a financial snapshot at this meeting, since the system is in process of closing for the porous fiscal.year. October and November financial reports will be presented at the November board meeting.

  • Newswire : The lie about immigrants and America’s debt to them  

    By Jason Roberts, NNPA

    There is a lie moving through America. It creeps through congressional halls and across television screens, whispering that undocumented immigrants live freely off the sweat of the American taxpayer. It is a lie told by those who know better and repeated by those who are too ignorant—or too hateful—to care. And while the lie spreads, the truth is being brutalized on the streets.
    According to data from the Cato Institute, Immigration and Customs Enforcement has intensified its war on peaceful people. As of this past summer, ICE was arresting 1,100 percent more noncriminal immigrants than it did in 2017. By June 2025, its agents were seizing nearly 3,800 men, women, and children each week, most with no criminal record at all. They are landscapers, caregivers, construction workers, restaurant staff—the quiet hands that build this nation’s comfort. Yet ICE agents, masked and faceless, now stalk them at bus stops, schools, and home improvement stores. These are not arrests made in the name of safety—they are acts of terror disguised as law.

    The architects of this cruelty justify it with another lie: that these people are bleeding America dry, taking what they have not earned. But every ledger, every study, every dollar collected proves the opposite.

    Undocumented immigrants, forbidden from accessing almost every public benefit, pour billions into the U.S. economy. In 2022 alone, they paid $96.7 billion in taxes—nearly $9,000 each—into the same systems that exclude them. They paid $25.7 billion into Social Security, even though the law bars them from ever receiving a penny of it. Their effective state and local tax rate, 8.9 percent, exceeds that paid by the top 1 percent of U.S. earners. And still, politicians like J.D. Vance and Donald Trump tell America that these workers are stealing from it.
    They insist that Democrats shut down the government to hand health care to “illegal immigrants.” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called that accusation what it is: a lie. “Nowhere have Democrats suggested that we’re interested in changing federal law,” Jeffries said. “The question for the president is whether he’s interested in protecting the health care of the American people.”
    NBC News confirmed that the GOP’s narrative was false. So did NPR, which reported plainly: “People living in the U.S. who are undocumented do not qualify for Medicaid. They do not qualify for tax credits on the ACA health care exchanges.” But facts no longer seem to matter. Lies feed fear, and fear feeds votes. While the powerful argue over fiction, the reality on the ground has become unbearable.
    Cato’s research shows that fewer than 6 percent of immigrants detained by ICE had violent convictions. In Los Angeles, more than 70 percent of those taken in early June had no criminal record at all. One senior White House adviser was quoted as asking ICE agents, “Why aren’t you at Home Depot? Why aren’t you at 7-Eleven?”—as if immigrant workers were quarry to be hunted.
    This is what America has become: a nation that criminalizes the hands that feed it. While undocumented families harvest crops, clean hospital rooms, and care for the elderly, their wages are taxed to fund public schools, emergency services, and the very agencies that terrorize them. They pay, but they cannot claim. They build, but they cannot belong. Then came the 2025 tax and budget law—Trump’s latest cruelty written into policy. It stripped 1.4 million lawfully present immigrants, including refugees and asylees, of their health coverage. It punished not only the undocumented but also those who had done everything right. America, it seems, has decided that suffering is the price of entry.

    What the numbers reveal is not an invasion—it is a sacrifice. Undocumented immigrants have become the unacknowledged benefactors of a country that feeds on their labor while denying their humanity. They are propping up Social Security, sustaining state budgets, and fueling industries that would collapse without them. And yet they are chased, detained, and deported under the pretense of justice. The real theft in America is not committed by the undocumented. It is committed by those who steal their dignity, their freedom, and the truth. This is not a debate about borders. It is a reckoning with the lies we tell to justify cruelty. The undocumented are not taking from America—they are keeping it alive.
    And one day, when the history of this era is written, the numbers will still speak. They will tell of millions who worked, paid, and gave everything they could, while a government lied about their worth. They will tell how America, built by the hands of the unfree, once again turned its back on the very people who held it upright. The lie about immigrants is as old as America itself. But the truth endures: they are not our burden—they are our debt.

     

     

  • Newswire : The Shutdown Standoff

    By April Ryan, NNPA White House Correspondent

     

    “We are not going to back down,” demanded House Minority Leader Congressman Hakeem Jeffries regarding healthcare for Americans. The Affordable Care Act is one of the key issues that created a stalemate between Democrats and Republicans, which resulted in the government shutdown. The New York Congressman says he is open to meeting with the president, the vice president, and others in the Republican Party to end the government shutdown that began on October 1st. However, he is adamant about not caving on the healthcare issue.
    On the Hill today, House Speaker Mike Johnson calls on Democrats to reopen the government so that negotiations can continue. Republicans need five Democratic senators to vote for the House-passed continuing resolution, which makes drastic cuts to health care. Jefferies vows Democrats will not support a “partisan spending bill that guts healthcare.” Adding to the Republican pressure on Democrats, President Donald Trump said over the weekend, furthering a verbal sparring match, “Democrats are causing the loss of a lot of jobs with a shutdown.”
    However, Jeffries says those in charge are to blame, explaining, “The extremists have complete control over the government. What are we missing here?” Republicans are in charge of the White House, the House, the Senate, and the Supreme Court. Jefferies made these comments on The Tea With April:

    “They [Republicans] would rather shut the government down than provide healthcare. ”The shutdown could last at least two weeks, creating layoffs and firings. Republicans are refusing to extend the tax credits for the Affordable Care Act for working-class Americans. Jeffries also contradicts the GOP narrative, “a Republican lie that we are trying to provide healthcare to undocumented workers.”

    Democrats emphasize that more than 24 million Americans rely on the Affordable Care Act tax credits to afford and access healthcare in this nation. In a related note, the government shutdown is also to blame for the delayed meeting between Jeffries and the Democratic New York Mayoral front-runner, Zohran Mamdani. Jeffries has not endorsed a New York mayoral candidate yet.