International
Zelensky faces nationwide protests after dissolving independent corruption watchdogs
Quick Hit:
President Zelensky is facing the largest protests since the war began after dismantling Ukraine’s top anti-corruption bodies. A new law puts previously independent agencies under presidential control, sparking backlash from liberal Ukrainians and Western allies. Demonstrators accuse Zelensky of consolidating power and betraying democratic reforms.
Key Details:
- Zelensky signed legislation placing independent anti-corruption units NABU and SAPO under control of the prosecutor general, who is appointed by the president.
- Security forces raided over 70 locations tied to anti-corruption groups, arresting senior officials including a top NABU detective.
- Hundreds protested in major Ukrainian cities; European leaders warned the move could jeopardize Western support and funding.
I gathered all heads of Ukraine’s law enforcement and anti-corruption agencies, along with the Prosecutor General. It was a much-needed meeting — a frank and constructive conversation that truly helps. We all share a common enemy: the Russian occupiers. And defending the… pic.twitter.com/GNIA585mGR
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) July 23, 2025
Diving Deeper:
Zelensky’s decision to effectively neuter Ukraine’s flagship anti-corruption institutions has drawn fierce backlash from within his own country and from Western governments. What began as allegations of Russian infiltration into the National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU) and the Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office (SAPO) has quickly escalated into a full-blown political crisis. On Monday, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) conducted sweeping raids, arresting key figures such as Ruslan Magamedrasulov, one of NABU’s top detectives.
The following day, Zelensky signed into law a bill placing NABU and SAPO under the authority of the prosecutor general — a figure directly appointed by the president. The bill gives the prosecutor access to all ongoing investigations and the power to shut down cases or reassign them, stripping the agencies of their previously guaranteed independence. According to a blistering statement from NABU, “Ukraine’s anti-corruption infrastructure, built since 2015, will be destroyed.”
The public response was swift and reminiscent of the early days of Ukraine’s Euromaidan protests. Demonstrations ignited across Kyiv, Lviv, Odesa, and Dnipropetrovsk, with protestors carrying signs reading “Stop robbing our future” and “Do you want it like in Russia?” — a clear condemnation of what they view as creeping authoritarianism. Left-wing Ukrainian media outlets have drawn direct parallels to the 2013-2014 uprising that ousted pro-Russian leadership. The Kyiv Independent, a leading voice of Ukraine’s liberal establishment, accused Zelensky of prioritizing personal power over democratic principles, warning of a systemic crackdown on political opposition.
Despite the outrage, Zelensky attempted to contain the fallout by convening a meeting with Ukraine’s top anti-corruption and law enforcement officials. In a post on X, he framed the gathering as a demonstration of unity against Russia, writing: “We all share a common enemy: the Russian occupiers.” Yet NABU released a follow-up statement that flatly contradicted the president’s optimistic portrayal. “From now on, NABU and SAPO are deprived of the guarantees that allowed them to effectively carry out their tasks,” the agency said, calling for legislative action to restore their autonomy.
Even former Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba — once a staunch ally during the early war effort — condemned the move, calling it a “bad day for Ukraine” and urging Zelensky to decide whether to “stand with the people or against them.” Zelensky had already drawn criticism from the left for conscripting anti-corruption activists into the military, further straining ties with pro-Western reformists.
Still, the protests are unlikely to gain the same traction as the Euromaidan movement. Nationalist factions, which were instrumental in 2014, have mostly stayed on the sidelines — or worse, mocked the liberal protestors. Maksin Zhorin, commander of the Azov-descended 3rd Army Corps, praised the SBU raids, while others dismissed the protestors as privileged draft dodgers. One nationalist Telegram account claimed he attended briefly but left disgusted, remarking, “A lot more cops were sent to protect the f*****s,” in reference to LGBT supporters he saw at the demonstration, comparing the state’s leniency toward liberal activists to its aggressive stance toward right-wing protests.
From the international front, the European Union issued a warning through spokesman Guillaume Mercier, signaling that Ukraine’s financial aid could be on the line. “The EU provides significant financial assistance to Ukraine, conditional on progress in transparency, judicial reform, and democratic governance,” he said — a reminder that the West’s patience is not limitless.
The gutting of NABU and SAPO represents a critical turning point. These institutions were once hailed as triumphs of the post-Euromaidan reform era — creations of Western NGOs and a symbol of Ukraine’s break from its Soviet legacy. With their independence now compromised, Zelensky may find that his efforts to consolidate power could fracture both domestic unity and vital Western support at a time when Ukraine can least afford it.
“Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky” by Ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken licensed under (CC BY-SA 4.0)
illegal immigration
While Trump has southern border secure, hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants still flooding in from Canada
From The Center Square
By
Under the Biden administration, the greatest number of illegal border crossers at the U.S.-Canada border were reported in U.S. history, breaking records nearly every month for four years, The Center Square first reported.
While record high numbers dropped under the Trump administration, illegal entries still remain high in northern border states, with some states reporting more apprehensions in 2025 than during the Biden years.
Fourteen U.S. states share the longest international border in the world with Canada, totaling 5,525 miles across land and water.
The majority of illegal border crossers were apprehended and encountered in five northern border states, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data analyzed by The Center Square. Nearly half were reported in New York. Washington, Vermont, Maine and Montana recorded the next greatest numbers.
The majority of northern border states reported the greatest number of illegal entries in U.S. history in 2024, the last year of the Biden administration, according to CBP data. At the height of the border crisis, illegal entries reached nearly 200,000 at the northern border in 2024 and in 2023, first reported by The Center Square.
For fiscal years 2022 through 2025, 754,928 illegal border crossers were reported in 14 northern border states, according to the latest available CBP data.
From west to east, illegal entries at the northern border totaled:
-
Alaska: 7,380
-
Washington: 135,116
-
Idaho: 620
-
Montana: 32,036
-
North Dakota: 14,818
-
Minnesota: 8,315
-
Wisconsin: 118
-
Michigan: 50,321
-
Ohio: 1,546
-
Pennsylvania: 19,145
-
New York: 363,910
-
Vermont: 61,790
-
New Hampshire: 82
-
Maine: 59,731
Notably, Alaska, Idaho, New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin reported record high illegal crossings in 2023. Although Montana and North Dakota saw a drop in 2025 from record highs in 2024, the number of illegal border crossers apprehended in the two states in 2025 were greater than they were in 2022; in Montana they were more than double.
The data only includes nine months of the Trump administration. The CBP fiscal year goes from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30. Biden administration data includes the first three months of fiscal 2025, nine months of fiscal 2021, and all of fiscal years 2022, 2023 and 2024. Combined, illegal northern border crosser apprehensions totaled roughly one million under the Biden administration, according to CBP data.
The data excludes “gotaways,” the official term used by CBP to describe foreign nationals who illegally enter between ports of entry to evade capture, don’t make immigration claims and don’t return to their country of origin. CBP does not publicly report gotaway data. The Center Square exclusively obtained it from Border Patrol agents. More than two million gotaways were identified by Border Patrol agents under the Biden administration, although the figure is expected to be much higher, The Center Square first reported.
For decades, the northern border has been largely unmanned and unprotected with increased threats of terrorism and lack of operational control, The Center Square reported.
Unlike the 1,954-mile U.S.-Mexico border, there is no border wall, significantly less technological equipment exists and far fewer agents are stationed there.
Officials have explained that the data represents a fraction of illegal border crossers – it remains unclear how many really came through largely remote areas where one Border Patrol agent may be responsible for patrolling several hundred miles, The Center Square has reported.
Despite being understaffed and having far less resources, Border Patrol and CBP agents at the U.S.-Canada border apprehended the greatest number of known or suspected terrorists (KSTs) in U.S. history during the Biden administration – 1,216, or 64% of the KSTs apprehended nationwide, The Center Square exclusively reported.
In February, President Donald Trump for the first time in U.S. history declared a national emergency at the northern border, also ordering the U.S. military to implement border security measures there. After shutting down illegal entries at the southwest border, the administration acknowledged the majority of fentanyl and KSTs were coming through the northern border, The Center Square reported.
The Trump administration has also prioritized increased funding, recruitment and hiring and investment in technological capabilities at the northern border.
Censorship Industrial Complex
Foreign Leaders Caught Orchestrating Campaign To Censor American Right-Wing Media Companies

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
Labour Party files — including internal documents never before released — reveal a coordinated series of maneuvers, strategic deceptions and covert operations that helped deliver U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer to Downing Street, according to the book by investigative journalist Paul Holden. The campaign operated largely behind the scenes that mirrored the same tactics a corporate, pro-Israel faction inside the Labour Party used to crush dissent during Jeremy Corbyn’s rise, a strategy that dismantled the party’s left flank and reshaped British politics.
Holden’s reporting shows that these operatives built an array of anti-disinformation groups that presented themselves as neutral fact-checkers while aggressively targeting conservative outlets for demonetization, deplatforming and reputational damage. Internal documents and interviews indicate these organizations were never independent; they worked in lockstep with senior Labour figures who sought to contain populist movements on both sides of the Atlantic.
As a nonprofit, we are dependent on the generosity of our readers.
Please consider making a small donation of any amount here.
Thank you!
Labour officials celebrated an unexpected election surge in 2017, unaware that a faction inside their own party had been covertly diverting resources to undermine Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership. Holden’s investigation reveals that senior Labour bureaucrats secretly operated a parallel campaign from Ergon House, funneling money and support to anti-Corbyn candidates while starving the official operation of crucial funds.
A 2020 leaked internal report (860-page dossier) revealed deep factional divisions inside the Labour Party and showed that senior staff privately opposed Corbyn’s leadership and expressed hope that Labour would underperform in the 2017 election.
The book shows that the misuse of donations was far more extensive than previously known and may have breached election spending laws, especially in constituencies where diverted money was reported incorrectly. The party’s refusal to release campaign materials tied to this funding has intensified criticism of its transparency and raised questions about Starmer’s promise to restore trust in government.
After the 2017 election, strategist Morgan McSweeney began shaping Labour Together into an anti-Corbyn vehicle, using wealthy donors and newly created advocacy groups to amplify allegations that would weaken Corbyn’s support. Holden documents that McSweeney failed to report more than £700,000 (approximately $885,000 to $900,000) in donations despite being legally obligated to disclose them, a violation that later resulted in fines.
BBC News reported in 2022 that Labour Together was fined £14,250 (approximately $18,000) for failing to declare more than £730,000 in donations, confirming that key figures in Starmer’s political orbit had already breached U.K. election transparency laws.
By 2019, McSweeney had aligned himself with Starmer’s leadership ambitions, helping him run as a continuity candidate despite planning a sharp ideological shift once in power. Holden concludes that this project ultimately hollowed out Labour’s credibility, leaving the party mired in collapsing public confidence and confronting mounting questions about the integrity of its top advisers.
(Featured Image Media Credit: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer/picture by Simon Dawson/Flickr)
-
Energy15 hours agoA look inside the ‘floatel’ housing B.C.’s LNG workforce
-
International1 day agoFBI may have finally nabbed the Jan. 6 pipe bomber
-
Energy2 days agoCanada following Europe’s stumble by ignoring energy reality
-
COVID-1923 hours agoUniversity of Colorado will pay $10 million to staff, students for trying to force them to take COVID shots
-
Business2 days agoCanada’s climate agenda hit business hard but barely cut emissions
-
espionage1 day agoDigital messages reportedly allege Chinese police targeted dissident who died suspiciously near Vancouver
-
Energy15 hours agoELZABETH MAY HAS IT WRONG: An Alberta to Prince Rupert Oil Pipeline Will Contribute to Greater Global Oil Tanker Safety
-
Alberta2 days agoAlberta Sports Hall of Fame Announces Class of 2026 Inductees
