Wroblewski for Slate: Trump’s Vengeance Tour Is Opening the Door to Something More Terrible

President Donald Trump’s revenge campaign of criminal prosecutions against his political enemies is showing no signs of stopping. Just this past week brought new indictments against former FBI Director James Comey, who earned the president’s ire for his role in the Russia investigation, and the Southern Poverty Law Center, whose work fighting hate groups has irked the political right.

It is possible these cases will stumble, just like the administration’s past attempts to turn “Lock her up” into a governing philosophy. Judges and grand juries foiled previous efforts to target Comey, New York Attorney General Letitia James, and the so-called Seditious Six—Democratic lawmakers who filmed a video urging troops to resist illegal orders. Prosecutors also dropped a probe of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell last week in the face of Republican political pressure.

But even if nobody ultimately goes to jail, these investigations and indictments have been far from harmless. They have corroded our justice system by showing it can be wielded as a tool of harassment, intimidation, and vengeance. To undo that damage, we will need reforms that rebuild guardrails against abuse. Trump’s legal minions have been able to intrusively investigate his foes, rummaging through their private information using grand jury subpoenas, and repeatedly presenting charges to grand juries until something—anything—might stick.

They have been able to do this because federal prosecutors wield extraordinary power under a “presumption of regularity”; courts generally assume that the government’s lawyers act in good faith, follow norms of fairness, and keep politics out of charging decisions. That presumption rests on a reputation built over generations that the current administration has shattered.

Read more in Slate

Jacoby on Background Briefing: A Report From Kyiv on Trump Checking in With the Boss Yesterday in His Hour and Half Phone Call With Putin

Background Briefing with Ian Masters · A Report From Kyiv on Trump Checking in With the Boss Yesterday in His Phone Call With Putin

 

Then we go to Kyiv, Ukraine to speak with Tamar Jacoby, the Director of the Progressive Policy Institute’s New Ukraine Project. She was a senior writer and justice editor at Newsweek and, before that, the deputy editor of the New York Times op-ed page. She is the author of Displaced: The Ukrainian Refugee Experience and we discuss how yesterday Trump checked in with the boss in and hour and half phone call with Putin and Tamar’s article at The Washington Monthly, “The U.S.-Europe Rift: How Trump’s Iran War is Making it Worse.”

Kahlenberg in Inside Higher Ed: ‘Excluded,’ Housing Segregation and My Small College Town

[…]

As Kahlenberg points out, homeowners have legitimate concerns about the risk of eroding property values, heightened congestion and noise, and overtaxed city services.

Kahlenberg argues, however, that we have overindexed on protecting existing homeowners and failed to strike a balance between their needs and those of neighbors who would like to move to our towns. He points out that enacting missing-middle local policies has been shown to have many more upsides, including providing housing for a greater range of family incomes, with few of the most feared downsides (housing value drops, congestion, etc.) materializing.

[…]

Read more in Inside Higher Ed

Americans rank 4th in the world for median income, 44th for life expectancy

FACT: Americans rank 4th in the world for median income, 44th for life expectancy.

THE NUMBERS: U.K. “rank” if it were an American state –

Per capita income: 51st
Life expectancy 1st

 WHAT THEY MEAN: 

The gloomier sort of Brit has been muttering for 15 years about income comparisons with the United States. Here’s a sample from the London-based Social Market Foundation last year:

“[T]he UK’s failure to match higher incomes across the Atlantic has drawn particular attention and generated greater concern. Almost a decade ago, observers were suggesting that if the UK were an American state it would be the second poorest … More recently, commentators have used the gap to argue that ‘Britain is a developing country,’ or that the ‘hard working US is getting rich while the UK struggles on benefits.’”

Is the United States really that rich? In some ways, yes:

Statisticians at Our World in Data, scrutinizing World Bank stats on incomes and poverty rates, find Americans earning $72.07 in “international dollars” per person each day. Our World’s “international dollar” isn’t the green one in the wallet, but a hypothetical version that they’ve (a) normalized for inflation, (b) used “purchasing power parities” to avoid currency-valuation-based income skews, and (c) taken a “median” rather than a “mean” average to minimize effects of superwealthy individuals. Their list places Americans 4th among 115 countries. See below for some quibbles — they don’t include a few small high-income countries (e.g., Singapore, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar); some of the gap represents longer U.S. working hours rather than higher pay as such; and (see below) the U.S. fares less well on “wealth” than “income.” But nonetheless, $72.07 per day for the median American is a lot — 32% above the median Brit’s $54.55, 70% above Japan’s $42.10, and five times China’s $13.36. So Americans do indeed earn a lot of money. Here’s a sample of Our World’s findings:

Median daily income, international PPP dollars* –
  1. Luxembourg $89.49
  2. Norway $77.76
  3. Switzerland $72.29
  4. United States $72.07
15. United Kingdom $54.55
25. Japan $42.10
58. China $13.32

So World Cup visitors to the U.S. venues this June may be a little envious of American affluence. Americans shouldn’t be spiking any spherical footballs, though. Here’s a mirror-image U.S.-U.K. comparison from gloomy researchers at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore:

“Why has the U.S. fallen behind in health? … Forty years ago, babies born in the U.S. and the U.K. could expect to live to the same age. Today, however, life expectancy is several years shorter on our side of the Atlantic Ocean. What’s going on? In a new analysis of 2023 data from the U.S. and England and Wales, this report finds that differences in four preventable causes of death can explain the entire 2.7-year gap in life expectancy: cardiovascular disease, overdose, motor vehicle crashes, and gun violence.”

So if Americans might earn more money, they have less time to enjoy it. The Centers for Disease Control’s most recent life-expectancy report takes the data through 2024, and finds Americans expecting 79 years at birth. This represents full recovery from the COVID pandemic drop and closes a bit of the transatlantic gap, but still leaves Americans fully two years below the U.K.’s 81-year life expectancy. Flipping the Social Market Foundation’s Brits-at-the-bottom premise, the U.K. would likely tie for first with Hawaii among American states for life expectancy. On a world scale, the World Bank’s full span of cross-country life expectancy comparisons, all from 2024 and excluding micro-states, tax havens, and small dependencies, places the U.S. 44th. Another short table, with more complete stats below:

 

Japan 84 years
Australia 83 years
UK 81 years
U.S. 79 years
China 78 years

 

A $72.07 vs. $54.55 daily earnings gap is the equivalent of $6,400 a year. If asked whether they’d sacrifice that to get two more years of life, lots of Americans would probably accept.

Why the difference? Drawing from the JHU report and KFF analysis, the life-expectancy divide appears (a) mainly related to public health and social issues, and (b) possible to close. Two ways to look at this:

1. Causes: Kaiser Foundation researchers point out two big contributors to the gap:

i. Homicides and drug overdoses: About a quarter of the gap vis-à-vis America’s European and Asian peer economies — about six months’ worth of life — reflects higher U.S. rates of firearm crimes and drug overdoses. America’s homicide rate, at 5.8 per 100,000 people annually, compares poorly to Poland’s 1.0 homicides per 100,000 people, the U.K.’s 1.2, and France’s 2.3. Across the Pacific, Singapore’s 0.1 homicides per 100,000 people is the world’s lowest rate, with Japan’s 0.2 and China’s 0.5 not much higher. Likewise, KFF reports that the U.S. rate of death from drug overdoses and alcohol poisoning (as of 2023) was 29 per 100,000 people, about six times the 5 deaths per 100,000 people rate in other high-income countries.

ii. Heart and lung diseases: Most of the rest, about a year’s worth, reflects higher U.S. rates of lung and heart diseases in middle and old age. Here, the main issues appear to be diet, obesity, smoking, and exercise rates.

2. Disparities: The U.S.’s 79-year expectancy is a national median. CDC statisticians haven’t completed their analysis by states and regions, and by race and ethnicity, for 2024, but earlier years are suggestive. As of 2022, state life expectancies varied by eight years, from West Virginia’s 72 years to the European-standard 80 years in Massachusetts and Hawaii. By race and ethnicity (as of 2023), the range is wider still: 70 years for Native Americans, 74 years for African Americans, 78 years for white Americans, a European-standard 81 years for Hispanics (including 82 for Puerto Ricans), and a world-standard 85 years for Asian Americans.

So: The causes are complex social and policy problems, but not totally intractable. The U.S. homicide rate peaked in the 1980s at 11.6 per 100,000 and has since fallen by half. Drug overdose deaths, meanwhile, peaked early in 2023. As treatment has grown more easily available and public awareness campaigns have become more effective, overdose deaths have dropped about 40%. Gaps between states likewise suggest that local policies can have large impacts.

And as far as doleful cross-country comparisons go, Americans are high earners. Doubtless, there are things others can learn from us on that. There’s a lot we can learn as well.

FURTHER READING

PPI’s four principles for response to tariffs and economic isolationism:

  • Defend the Constitution and oppose rule by decree;
  • Connect tariff policy to growth, work, prices and family budgets, and living standards;
  • Stand by America’s neighbors and allies;
  • Offer a positive alternative.

U.S./U.K.

Speaking to Congress yesterday, King Charles reflects on the U.S.-UK alliance past and present. (Or video via C-SPAN.)

The London-based Social Market Foundation analyzes high American incomes.

While Johns Hopkins University researchers in Baltimore reflect on long British lives.

How rich is America? 

Our World in Data tracks daily income and consumption by country, finds Americans super-rich.

Much the same in the OECD’s table of PPP-based median incomes.

The World Bank’s Gross National Income per capita table has a more complete list of countries.

And UBS’s 2025 Global Wealth Report offers a different perspective. This tries to estimate median “wealth” — that is, the value of someone’s property, savings, and belongings, minus debt — as opposed to income. Their results for Americans don’t quite glitter like the income data: Americans average $124,000 in per-adult wealth, and rank 15th in the world, noticeably below 8th-place Britain’s $176,000. Setting aside tax-haven Luxembourg’s $395,000 as anomalous, UBS reports Australians to be the world’s richest people, with $268,000 in wealth per adult.

Why so short-lived?

CDC on U.S. life expectancy (as of 2024).

… by state (2022).

… by race and ethnicity (2023,

The Kaiser Foundation has data on U.S.-v.-peer life expectancy gaps.

… and their origins.

For broader context, the World Bank’s full table has life expectancy at birth for 270 countries, territories, and regions. Two European micro-states — Monaco and San Marino — lead the ranking with 86-year life expectancies. Chad and Nigeria are lowest on the table, both with 55. A representative list:

Japan 84 years
Sweden 84 years
Spain 84 years
France 83 years
Italy 83 years
Korea 83 years
Australia 83 years
Canada 82 years
Germany 81 years
UK 81 years
Chile 81 years
High-income average  80 years
Albania 80 years
United States  79 years
China 78 years
Jordan 78 years
Thailand 77 years
Brazil 76 years
Ukraine 75 years
Mexico 75 years
Vietnam 75 years
World average  73 years
Russia 73 years
India 72 years
Senegal 69 years
Pakistan 68 years
Fiji 67 years
South Africa 66 years
Low-income average  65 years
Central African Republic 58 years
Chad 55 years
Nigeria 55 years

ABOUT ED

Ed Gresser is Vice President and Director for Trade and Global Markets at PPI.

Ed returns to PPI after working for the think tank from 2001-2011. He most recently served as the Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Trade Policy and Economics at the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). In this position, he led USTR’s economic research unit from 2015-2021, and chaired the 21-agency Trade Policy Staff Committee.

Ed began his career on Capitol Hill before serving USTR as Policy Advisor to USTR Charlene Barshefsky from 1998 to 2001. He then led PPI’s Trade and Global Markets Project from 2001 to 2011. After PPI, he co-founded and directed the independent think tank ProgressiveEconomy until rejoining USTR in 2015. In 2013, the Washington International Trade Association presented him with its Lighthouse Award, awarded annually to an individual or group for significant contributions to trade policy.

Ed is the author of Freedom from Want: American Liberalism and the Global Economy (2007). He has published in a variety of journals and newspapers, and his research has been cited by leading academics and international organizations including the WTO, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund. He is a graduate of Stanford University and holds a Master’s Degree in International Affairs from Columbia Universities and a certificate from the Averell Harriman Institute for Advanced Study of the Soviet Union.

Read the full email and sign up for the Trade Fact of the Week.

American Identity Project Prospectus

TEACHING STUDENTS WHAT IT MEANS TO BE AN AMERICAN

Today, America is facing four profound and interrelated challenges:

  • Social cohesion is eroding on both sides of the political spectrum. Right-wing white nationalists see some citizens as more American than others and have poisoned the discourse by labeling opponents as enemies, while left-wing race essentialists undermine what we have in common as Americans.
  • Historically, our civic creed has provided the glue that unifies Americans of diverse backgrounds, yet today, young Americans report much less faith in America and in democracy than older Americans.
  • America’s founders believed education was the safeguard of democracy. Yet our schools have fallen short, as many Americans have demonstrated a troubling tolerance for political leaders who defy long-standing liberal democratic norms.
  • Paradoxically, figures who show autocratic tendencies are sometimes seen by Americans as particularly patriotic, underlining the need for those who stand firmly for democracy to embrace a proud American identity.

As America grapples with these difficulties, schools and universities offer a crucial opportunity for a better path forward. To counter rising illiberalism, foundations and researchers have pushed for sensible reforms such as enhanced civics instruction and accountability. The more profound challenge, however, lies in shaping a shared American identity.

In his biography of teacher union leader Albert Shanker (1928-1997), Richard Kahlenberg highlights a story told by former Tennessee Governor Lamar Alexander. A group of education leaders was stymied when asked a basic question about why America has public schools. Shanker provided a provocative answer: “to teach children what it means to be an American.” Shanker believed that beyond literacy and job skills, public schools must instill shared democratic values to ensure the survival of America’s unique experiment in self-governance. Without this common foundation, Shanker warned, the nation risked fracturing into isolated factions. Because American national identity does not derive from a particular ethnic heritage, he said, the nation’s civic creed is the only thing holding us together. Today, almost three decades after Shanker’s death, America is increasingly divided, and its commitment to common democratic principles has grown weaker.

To address these challenges, the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) has launched the American Identity Project, directed by Kahlenberg and guided by a stellar advisory group of prominent Americans, that asks: “As our nation celebrates its 250th birthday, what does it mean to be an American today?” In a highly polarized country, what precisely are the best ideas and aspirational values that bind together what author Heather McGee calls a nation of “ancestral strangers”? In addition, once those American values are identified, what are the best ways to instill them in school children? What exactly should the public schools and colleges be doing to teach a common American identity that inculcates a deep and healthy sense of what Alexis de Tocqueville called “reflective patriotism” that encourages debate about how to live up to the country’s lofty ideals rather than blind loyalty to the nation?

Continue reading about the American Identity Project.

Gresser in Articles of Interest: Taxes and Tariffs

In this episode of Articles of Interest, Ed Gresser discusses the gender disparity in tariff rates, especially how tariff rates on women’s clothing were, on average, 16.7% in 2022 — 2.9 percentage points higher than the 13.6% average tariff rate for men’s clothing.

 

Manno for Education Next: Apprenticeship Should Be a Centerpiece of Workforce Pell

Apprenticeship does something American education and workforce training policy too rarely gets right. It blends learning and earning instead of forcing people to choose between school and work. National Apprenticeship Week (this year from April 26 to May 2) celebrates this practical but still underused pathway to opportunity.

But the occasion demands more than a celebration. We should put a hard question in front of policymakers: Will the new Workforce Pell program (part of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act) strengthen apprenticeship or sideline one of the best models we have for linking education to work? That question matters because Workforce Pell could become one of the most important changes in federal aid policy in years.

Under the U.S. Department of Education’s proposed guidelines for implementing Workforce Pell, starting in July 2026 students can use Pell Grants for eligible short-term workforce programs, some as short as eight weeks. The Department has framed the reform as a way to help students complete programs quickly, enter the labor market with less debt, and use stackable credentials as stepping stones to further postsecondary study.

Those are worthy goals. But if Workforce Pell is supposed to back high-value, job-connected education, then apprenticeships should be one of its prime use cases. That’s because an apprenticeship is not just another training program.

Read more in Education Next

Ex-DOJ Policy Chief Calls for Sweeping Criminal Justice Reforms to Stop Revenge Prosecutions

WASHINGTON (April 28, 2026) — The Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) today released “Fortifying the Guardrails: Reforming Federal Criminal Justice After Trump’s Revenge Prosecutions,” a comprehensive analysis by Jonathan Wroblewski, contributing author and former Director of the Office of Policy and Legislation in the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. The report examines how the Trump administration weaponizes federal criminal law against political opponents and provides a blueprint for structural reforms to prevent future abuse.

The report documents how the current federal criminal justice system, despite constitutional safeguards, proved vulnerable to politicization during the first 15 months of Trump’s second term. Through case studies of high-profile targets, including former FBI Director James Comey, New York Attorney General Letitia James, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, and six Democratic lawmakers, the report reveals systemic weaknesses that enabled selective prosecution and investigative harassment.

The report identifies five critical areas requiring reform:

  1. Criminal Code Reform: Federal criminal statutes are so vaguely defined and broadly written that they invite selective enforcement. The case against AG James, charging her with bank fraud for an allegedly misrepresented home purchase that caused no loss, exposed how prosecutors can manufacture serious felonies from minor conduct. Congress should undertake comprehensive code reform to clearly define crimes, distinguish degrees of severity, and eliminate undefined terms that prosecutors exploit.
  2. Subpoena and Grand Jury Reform: Investigative subpoenas can be weaponized to intimidate and harass without court oversight. Pending amendments to Federal Rule 17 would allow prosecutors to issue subpoenas for sensitive personal information without judicial review or notice to the affected party.
  3. DOJ Independence: While the Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States limits congressional ability to insulate the DOJ from presidential direction, internal policy reforms remain viable. Future administrations should codify the Principles of Federal Prosecution, increase transparency around White House contacts with the DOJ, and empower career officials and inspectors general to report and resist improper directives.
  4. Accountability: Those who designed and executed revenge prosecutions must face consequences. Disciplinary action, including potential termination of Department officials, referrals to state bar authorities, and congressional inquiry are essential to signal that weaponizing criminal power is incompatible with the rule of law.
  5. Foundational Principle: Federal criminal law must not be so broad or easily manipulated that it becomes a tool of political or personal payback. As Justice Robert Jackson observed in 1940, federal prosecutors wield vast powers that demand “the highest level of ethical integrity” to deliver equal justice under law.

The report notes that some systemic resilience emerged. Grand juries refused to indict several targets despite prosecutorial pressure, and courts dismissed cases against Comey and James on constitutional grounds. Yet legal fees, psychological toll, and chilled speech impose costs that survive dismissal and demonstrate that the system requires deliberate strengthening to prevent future abuses.

The report calls on Congress and the next administration to enact these reforms without delay, building on existing bipartisan support for concerns about overcriminalization and criminal code modernization.

Read and download the report here.

Founded in 1989, PPI is a catalyst for policy innovation and political reform based in Washington, D.C. Its mission is to create radically pragmatic ideas for moving America beyond ideological and partisan deadlock. Find an expert and learn more about PPI by visiting progressivepolicy.org. Follow us at @PPI.

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Media Contact: Ian O’Keefe – iokeefe@ppionline.org

Fortifying the Guardrails: Reforming Federal Criminal Justice After Trump’s Revenge Prosecutions

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Donald Trump has used his second term in office to launch a series of revenge prosecutions against political enemies unparalleled in U.S. history. His high‑profile targets, ranging from former FBI Director James Comey to a group of sitting Democratic lawmakers, have dominated the headlines. But the president’s assaults on impartial justice reveal threats to everyday Americans, too, whose constitutional rights are jeopardized by a system that lacks sufficient institutional guardrails against abusive investigations and indictments.

I spent over 30 years at the Department of Justice as a prosecutor and as a policy lawyer. I worked with countless attorneys who were committed, first and foremost, to justice, integrity, fairness, and equality under the law. Many of them now rightly express sorrow that the values of impartiality and political neutrality that animated the DOJ’s ethos for decades have broken down. Some suggest there is little that can be done to restore them in the face of a Supreme Court devoted to the “unitary executive” theory, which gives the president effectively unfettered control over his branch of government. Nonetheless, I believe there are concrete steps a new administration could take to strengthen the guardrails against a rogue president, and propose them in this report.

They stem from a simple premise: Federal criminal law and the procedures in place to administer it must not be so broad, vague, or easily manipulated that they can be readily turned into tools of political or personal payback. That is precisely what has occurred over the first 15 months of the second Trump term. Cases transparently animated by presidential grievance or political messaging have been packaged as ordinary law enforcement. At every stage of the criminal process — from the drafting of criminal statutes, to the decision to open an investigation, to the use of subpoenas and other grand jury process, to the independence (or lack thereof) of the Justice Department — the system has proven more fragile and susceptible to political manipulation than we who worked at the department ever thought possible.

In 2016, many of us assumed Trump’s calls to lock up Hillary Clinton were just a crude performance designed to thrill his base rather than a literal promise of future criminal prosecutions. The stump speech punchline has turned into a governing strategy of domination via legal warfare that goes far beyond just criminal law, encompassing punitive state action against universities, law firms, those who investigated the president in the past, and many others. Many of those actions have been thwarted by the courts or by grand juries. Nonetheless, the damage the Trump Administration is doing to the integrity of the nation’s justice system is deep and pervasive.

The problem is also not abating: This month, the Justice Department indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center based on the fanciful theory that it had defrauded donors by paying undercover informants within hate groups it had sought to disrupt, such as the Ku Klux Klan. The highly politicized case appears to be an audition of sorts by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Trump’s pliant former personal lawyer, in his bid to permanently succeed former Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was fired from her position in part because the president believed she failed to prosecute the president’s foes aggressively enough. Unless Republican Senators take a stand and reject a nominee who threatens to act as a political hatchet, we may well see more politicized indictments.

This report focuses on the most prominent case studies of revenge prosecutions so far and the reforms they suggest. The prosecution of New York Attorney General Letitia James, for example, spotlights the dangerous combination of an overbroad federal criminal code and highly discretionary charging authority. James’s indictment rested on an elastic interpretation of fraud statutes — interpretations that could be, and were, stretched to fit a political vendetta. Although those charges, along with those against James Comey, were ultimately dismissed because the acting U.S. Attorney lacked constitutional authority under the Appointments Clause, this legal defect could not erase all the fear, anxiety, pressure, and financial costs imposed on the targets and their families. Nor did it resolve the underlying problem: a federal criminal code so expansive and ill‑structured that it invites selective and abusive enforcement.

Congress and the next administration must repair today’s politicized federal criminal justice system. There is already bipartisan support to address overcriminalization and code reform. We urge lawmakers to build on the existing concerns by developing a process to review the criminal code and amend it where necessary to embody core criminal law principles, including clearly codified criminal laws, coherently graded, distinguishing crimes that are more serious from those that are less. Statutory definitions must be sharpened, limiting vague terms that invite prosecutors to “find a crime” once they have chosen a target. Such an architecture would more faithfully embody constitutional values and make it harder for any administration to use loosely worded laws against disfavored individuals.

The case of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell illustrates the use of investigative subpoenas as instruments of pressure and humiliation. In Powell’s case, Chief Judge Jeb Boasberg of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia found that subpoena power, designed as a neutral mechanism of information‑gathering, was being deployed by President Trump’s subordinates to send a clear political message to the Chair: fall in line with the president’s demands to reduce interest rates or face intrusive, public, and costly criminal scrutiny. Subpoena reform, including tighter judicial oversight, clearer relevance standards, and safeguards against the use of subpoenas to chill lawful policy disagreement or public criticism, is needed.

The case of the “Seditious Six” — Democratic lawmakers who drew Trump’s ire by urging troops on video to resist illegal orders — illustrates both how the grand jury can be a shield for citizens against an abusive executive but also a vehicle for prosecutorial abuse. The report reviews this episode and recommends reforms to the grand jury process to ensure its proper role as an investigative body and a buffer between citizen and state, and not an opaque instrument of intimidation and political revenge.

Overlaying these case‑specific reforms is the need for greater independence at the Department of Justice from the whims of an unscrupulous president. The Supreme Court’s decision in Trump v. United States limits what Congress can do to ensure Justice Department independence. But internal DOJ policies, including the Principles of Federal Prosecution developed by Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti in 1980 to rebuild public confidence in the integrity and independence of the Justice Department and designed precisely to prevent politicized charging decisions like what we’ve seen this last 15 months, need to be reembraced and reinforced. President Trump won’t be the last president tempted to politicize criminal law. But codifying and strengthening the norms of impartial justice will illuminate when pressure from the White House — sometimes public but sometimes conveyed through back channels or social media messages — distorts prosecutorial judgment and blurs the line between appropriate and political criminal law decision‑making. Future administrations should codify regulations that protect the DOJ from direct presidential or political interference in individual cases, increase transparency around contacts between the White House and the Department, and empower career officials and inspectors general to report and resist improper directives.

Finally, this report examines the question of accountability for President Trump’s accomplices in suborning justice. To deter future abuses, blatant misconduct must be punished. We outline a menu of accountability mechanisms: a congressional inquiry into these cases; potential disciplinary action, including termination, against Department officials who violated professional norms or legal obligations; and, where warranted, referrals to state bar authorities or inspectors general. Accountability is not about vengeance against individuals but about fully recognizing and signaling that using criminal power as a political weapon is incompatible with the rule of law.

Taken together, the five recommendations advanced here — criminal code reform, subpoena and grand jury reform, stronger DOJ independence, and meaningful accountability — are not a cure‑all. No statute or regulation or set of actions can fully prevent a determined president from trying to exploit the system. But they can raise the costs of doing so, narrow the opportunities for abuse, and equip future institutions with clearer tools to push back. The revenge prosecutions should be understood as a stress test that the current justice system partially passed and partially failed. The task now is to learn from the failures and fortify the guardrails before the next test arrives.

Read the full report. 

Manno for Real Clear Education: Stop Making Students Choose Between College and a Paycheck: The Growth of the Anti-Debt Apprenticeship Degree

National Apprenticeship Week, April 26 to May 2, focuses attention on earn-and-learn pathways to opportunity. It also underscores a larger truth. Higher education has a work problem.

For decades, the script for upward mobility asked students to do something that, for many, was a financial burden. They should push work to the margins, gain a degree, and then get a job.

That model left many with debt, limited work experience, and reasons to wonder how a college degree and economic mobility fit together.

The apprenticeship degree is emerging as an important answer to that problem. It’s not anti-college. It’s not anti-separation. It treats work and postsecondary education as partners, not rivals.

Read more for Real Clear Education

Manno for CC Daily: The trust gap in higher education

Higher education is caught in a contradiction. Americans are losing confidence in colleges and universities, yet many students say their education is valuable, career-relevant and worth the money. That tension isn’t a statistical curiosity. It’s at the heart of the sector’s problem.

A recent “Report of the Yale University Committee on Trust in Higher Education” helps explain why. The public hasn’t simply turned against college; it’s grown doubtful about its cost, fairness, transparency and sense of public purpose.

Public confidence in colleges and universities fell from 57% in 2015 to 36% in 2024, then rebounded modestly to 42% in 2025, according to Gallup. At the same time, the Pew Research Center reports that 70% of Americans now say the higher education system is headed in the wrong direction. Those aren’t the views of a small dissatisfied minority. They reflect a broad erosion of trust in one of America’s central civic and economic institutions.

And yet students report something more positive, according to Gallup and Lumina Foundation. About seven in 10 rate the quality of their education as excellent or very good, 69% say they feel they belong on campus, roughly nine in 10 say their degree is worth the investment, 93% say they are learning career-relevant skills, and 88% believe their degree will help them get a job.

This isn’t the portrait of a generation writing off college as a bad bet. It is the portrait of students who often value their own experience even while the wider public doubts the system that delivers it.

That gap matters. It suggests that the crisis in higher education isn’t simply one of educational quality. It’s a crisis of legitimacy.

Read more in CC Daily

Partnering with Ukraine: Rearming Europe Through Defence Industrial Cooperation

Four years into the full-scale war in Ukraine, with a second major conflagration raging in the Persian Gulf and an increasing number of Western countries talking about adapting  Ukraine’s way of war, there is growing recognition of the potential mutual benefit that  can be derived from more cooperation between Kyiv and the West. 

Policy makers and practitioners in the West and Ukraine have argued for exploring new forms of cooperation above and beyond Western military aid. Kyiv could give or sell its innovative, low-cost, battle-proven weapons to the West. Training, now largely one directional – Europeans training Ukrainian fighters – could evolve into more of a two way street. Western strategists have much to learn from Ukraine about how to integrate  unmanned vehicles – air, land, and sea drones – into their battle plans. But one of the most  promising approaches, often neglected in the West, is collaborative manufacturing. 

Ukraine has been talking about industrial cooperation for more than two years, and a handful of European countries have explored promising experiments. Under the so-called  ‘Danish model’, launched in mid-2024, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Oslo, and several other  donors alongside the European Union, bolstered Ukraine’s defence procurement by covering  the cost of selected arms purchases. More recently, some dozen Ukrainian companies have  signed agreements to produce weaponry in Western Europe, either alone or as part of a joint  venture with a Western firm.  

The war in the Persian Gulf has spurred new international interest in Ukrainian defence technology. Yet by and large, these are still small experiments – ingenious ideas with significant promise for both the West and Ukraine, but not yet meaningful steps toward the  integration of Ukrainian and European security. 

This paper asks why. What have these experiments hoped to achieve? What have they  accomplished? What lessons have been learned by Ukraine and its international partners? What if anything can be done to improve these fledgling initiatives and, most important,  scale them? 

The paper concludes with recommendations for policy makers, manufacturers, investors,  and facilitating middlemen. What can be done to build on the experiments under way, including the Danish model and a handful of government-sponsored joint ventures – an  approach Kyiv calls ‘Build With Ukraine’? Europe’s future security may turn on the results.

Read the full report.

Manno for The 74: Youth Apprenticeships Build a Stronger Bridge from School to Work and Adulthood

“Being an UpSkill youth apprentice has taught me more than I ever imagined. It led me to study business in college. It gave me responsibility and a clearer sense of direction.”

That’s what college student Owen Snyder said during a recent webinar about his high school senior year apprenticeship at German American Bank in Bloomington, Indiana. It shaped his pathway to Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business, where he’s a sophomore and continuing his apprenticeship.

His story captures what many young people want and many schools struggle to provide: not just information about possible future jobs, but practical ways to prepare for and get them.

For Hampton University freshman Maegan Godoy, the skills she learned as a high school apprentice at New America’s Partnership to Advance Youth Apprenticeship, or PAYA, have already proven their worth in her coursework as a political science major, she said during the same webinar.

Far from being just a pathway to an occupation, youth apprenticeships deepen academic learning, helping students connect classroom study to the habits, judgment and responsibility that adult work requires.

This National Apprenticeship Week is the right time to focus on these types of youth-focused programs, because they are a promising way to strengthen the bridge from school to work and adulthood. But there are barriers to their expansion.

Read more in The 74

Marshall for The Hill: Cut Better Deals, But Don’t Shutter Data Centers

President Trump is inflicting tariffs on America in a vain attempt to revive traditional manufacturing. Private investment is gushing instead into data centers, where the AI economy is being hatched.

The U.S. is the epicenter of this global investment boom in data centers, which support the internet, cloud computing and the training of ever-more capable artificial intelligence models. Spending on data centers is growing exponentially. Much of it comes from the “hyperscalers” like Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Oracle and OpenAI. The first four of these digital giants alone plowed $425 billion last year into centers, a figure expected to top $600 billion this year.

Surging capital investment in data centers and AI has helped propel the stock market to new heights. And for now, at least, it is making America the world’s foremost computing superpower, the pace car in a race against China and others to master AI. More than 4,000 data centers — almost 40 percent of the world total — are located here, compared to just 368 in China.

However, the U.S. digital goldrush is running into a groundswell of local resistance.

In Virginia, which has the nation’s biggest concentration of data centers (570), voters are having second thoughts. Three years ago, 69 percent said they were comfortable with new data centers in their community. That number has since dropped to 35 percent, with 59 percent voicing discomfort. Prince William County has nixed plans for a 1,700-acre campus near the Manassas civil war battlefield, which would have hosted dozens of data centers.

Maine recently became the first state to pause building large data centers pending a study of its energy needs. And Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) are pushing a bill in Washington to impose a national moratorium on construction.

The backlash springs from three main sources. First and most pervasive is the fear of soaring electricity bills. Data centers have a voracious appetite for power, putting pressure on utilities to generate more and upgrade local grids to transmit it. Residents worry that it portends higher monthly bills, even as energy costs already are rising faster than inflation. The centers also consume large volumes of water to cool servers, which could mean shortages and higher water bills. That has made them especially controversial in the desert West.

Second, a majority of Americans say they’re anxious about losing their jobs to AI. Such fears may be premature, but they cannot be airily dismissed. And while initially welcomed for creating construction jobs and generating substantial property tax revenues, data centers, essentially warehouses crammed with servers, have turned out to be only modest as job creators. An average facility might employ around 200 people.

Read more in The Hill

Ritz on Concord Coalition’s Facing the Future Podcast: Are Democrats Backing ‘Slopulist’ Tax Cuts?

This week on Facing the Future, host Bob Bixby spoke with Ben Ritz, Vice President of Policy Development at the Progressive Policy Institute, about recent tax policy proposals, budget challenges, and the broader implications for fiscal responsibility in the United States.

Critique of Major Tax Cut Proposals

The conversation focused heavily on two significant tax cut proposals introduced by Democratic Senators Cory Booker and Chris Van Hollen. Both plans aim to exempt a large portion of middle-class Americans from paying federal income tax—up to $75,000 under Booker’s plan and $92,000 under Van Hollen’s. Ritz was critical of these proposals, describing them as “slopulism,” a term he said meant “low-effort and designed to trend on social media algorithms rather than be good policy.”

He explained that with these proposals, “If you say them really quickly to someone – ‘Should we cut taxes on the middle class and working Americans?’– people say, ‘Yeah, sure, that sounds good.’ And then you actually look at the proposal and they have a lot of really bad consequences if you just think about the details for 5 minutes”

Ritz pointed out that the Van Hollen and Booker proposals are actually regressive despite appearing progressive at first glance. Because of the way deductions work, higher earners receive a disproportionately larger benefit. He noted, “Someone who earns $175,000 a year is getting twice the tax cut as somebody who earns $75,000” Furthermore, the cost implications are staggering: Van Hollen’s plan would cost about $1.5 trillion, while Booker’s proposal is nearly $7 trillion—exceeding the size of the Trump tax cuts and COVID relief spending.

Ritz emphasized the importance of fiscal responsibility, especially for Democrats who want to expand government programs. He warned, “If you want to be the party of ‘government can do things,’ you have to make it so that the government can do things.”

Budget Process and the President’s Proposal

Turning to the broader budget landscape, Ritz expressed skepticism about the President’s recent budget proposal, noting it lacked completeness and realism. “I didn’t see a budget proposal from the president. I saw a proposal for maybe 30% of the budget. There’s nothing on revenue and he only talked about discretionary spending, nothing on mandatory spending, which is about two-thirds of the budget when you include interest… I thought it was incomplete and irresponsible.”

“We’re spending $1 trillion a year on interest now and basically every year into the future”, Ritz said. “As a percent of GDP, it is the highest it has ever been. We have never spent as much of our national resources on federal interest payments as we do now, and are going to in the future. It’s more than we spend on national defense, or at least as we were before the war on Iran. We’ll see how that changes. But it’s more than we spend on Medicare and Medicaid, at least individually. And if we keep going on our current path, eventually it’s going to be even bigger than Social Security, which is the biggest program in the budget.”

Potential Solutions: Fiscal Commissions and Automatic Stabilizers

Ritz was “lukewarm positive” about the idea of a new fiscal commission, acknowledging its potential to restart conversations on budget reform. However, he stressed that “the process isn’t the problem, the people and the policy and the politics are the problem.” He advocated for action-forcing mechanisms to be part of a commission process, such as requiring Congress to vote up-or-down on commission recommendations to increase accountability.

On automatic stabilizers—mechanisms that would automatically adjust taxes or spending based on economic conditions—Ritz expressed strong support: “I’m a big proponent of them… I’d rather the default be an ideal outcome rather than an unsustainable one.”

Social Security and Holistic Budget Planning

With Social Security’s trust fund projected to become insolvent by 2032, Ritz supported forming a specific commission to address the issue but cautioned against treating it in isolation. He explained, “Social Security isn’t the only problem we have in 2032. Medicare’s main trust fund is going to run out at the same time, so we’re actually going to have multiple problems hitting at the same time. I don’t think you can look at Social Security entirely in isolation from the rest of the federal budget. What are you going to do about our other fiscal challenges? I think if we’re doing a Social Security-only commission, it needs to be circumscribed so that they can’t take all the solutions for all the other problems we face off the table.”

Listen here.