DeProgram with Ted Rall and John Kiriakou: “Are Furloughed Feds S.O.L.?”

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Political cartoonist Ted Rall and CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou look at the Trump administration’s plan to mint a $1 coin with the president’s image, his messaging to furloughed government workers that they may forfeit back pay, Colorado’s conversion therapy ban, and CIA Deputy Director Michael Ellis demotion of the acting general counsel—a career lawyer—and assuming the role himself.

  • Trump $1 Coin Controversy: The Treasury Department defends minting a $1 commemorative coin bearing President Trump’s image for the nation’s 250th birthday, citing the 2020 Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act to override a 1866 law prohibiting living portraits on currency and quelling monarchic vibes. Draft designs show Trump’s profile dominating the obverse, with the reverse side showcasing him fist-pumping before the American flag under “Fight, Fight, Fight.” This echoes Trump’s past currency clashes, like delaying Harriet Tubman’s $20 bill.
  • Back Pay Dispute: President Trump says that furloughed federal workers—nearly 750,000 affected—might not receive back pay post-shutdown, contradicting the 2019 Government Employee Fair Treatment Act he signed and the Office of Personnel Management’s explicit guidance promising retroactive compensation. A circulating White House memo argues that only essential employees like military and air traffic controllers qualify outright, requiring congressional approval for others, fueling union leaders’ cries of legal misinterpretation and threats of lawsuits as the impasse hits day seven.
  • Conversion Therapy: The Supreme Court’s conservative majority signals opposition to Colorado’s 2019 ban on conversion therapy for minors, viewing it as viewpoint-discriminating speech regulation during oral arguments in Chiles v. Salazar, where therapist Kaley Chiles claims First Amendment violations in her faith-based talk therapy. Justices like Alito and Roberts probe the state’s conduct-versus-speech distinction, drawing parallels to 2018 anti-abortion center rulings and recent gender care bans, potentially invalidating similar prohibitions in over 20 states while liberals like Jackson question inconsistent deference. Pro
  • CIA Deputy Director’s Power Grab: Michael Ellis abruptly demotes the acting general counsel—an unnamed career lawyer serving since January—and installs himself in the role, retaining his No. 2 position and prompting ethics red flags over inherent conflicts in self-advising on agency actions. This “bizarre” arrangement, approved by Director John Ratcliffe, unfolds amid Trump’s nomination of Joshua Simmons for permanent counsel, whose Senate hearing looms Wednesday, while Ellis— a 40-year-old Yale Law alum and Trump loyalist—navigates past scandals like Nunes’ surveillance briefings and Bolton memoir battles. Current and former officials voice alarms at the consolidation, violating professional conduct rules against self-interest judgments, as the demoted lawyer takes brief vacation.
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