International
Trump to sign executive order requiring voter ID for all elections

Quick Hit:
President Donald Trump announced Saturday he will sign an executive order requiring voter ID for every ballot cast in U.S. elections. In a Truth Social post, Trump vowed to eliminate widespread mail-in voting and mandate paper ballots, saying there will be “no exceptions” to the order.
Key Details:
- Trump said only those who are “very ill” or serving in the military overseas would be allowed to vote by mail, declaring that the current system is “corrupt.”
- A previous attempt to implement voter ID via executive order was blocked by Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who ruled that Congress—not the president—has authority to enact sweeping changes to election law.
- Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE), the first openly transgender member of Congress, accused Trump of an “all-out assault” on democracy over his efforts to eliminate voting machines and mail-in ballots.
Diving Deeper:
President Donald Trump is preparing to sign a sweeping executive order aimed at restoring election integrity by mandating voter ID and banning widespread mail-in voting. In a Truth Social post Saturday, Trump wrote, “Voter I.D. Must Be Part of Every Single Vote. NO EXCEPTIONS! I Will Be Doing An Executive Order To That End!!! Also, No Mail-In Voting, Except For Those That Are Very Ill, And The Far Away Military. USE PAPER BALLOTS ONLY!!!”
Trump has long criticized the current voting system as deeply flawed, pointing to mail-in ballots as a primary source of corruption. “The system, it’s not a question of being broken — the system is corrupt,” Trump told Breitbart News in December 2022. “A mail-in ballot will always be corrupt. When you go to a polling location and they want your identification… you can’t really vote unless it’s a legit deal.”
He noted that other countries, including France, have abandoned mass mail-in voting, and argued Democrats should want to “fix” the system. “Our elections are totally corrupt,” he said. “The Democrats should want to fix that. They don’t because it is to their benefit the way it is now. But the Republicans have no choice but to fix it.”
Fox News reported Sunday that a previous Trump executive order seeking to impose voter ID was partially struck down by U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, who ruled that the president cannot bypass Congress on such matters. In her ruling, Kollar-Kotelly said, “No statutory delegation of authority to the Executive Branch permits the President to short-circuit Congress’s deliberative process by executive order.”
Democrats have responded sharply to Trump’s plan. Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE) claimed last month that Trump’s approach represents “an all-out assault” on democracy for attempting to abolish voting machines and limit absentee voting. Trump, however, has made election integrity a cornerstone of his second term agenda, framing these moves as essential for restoring trust in the electoral system.
Health
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. wows to rebuild public trust in CDC

Quick Hit:
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services under President Trump, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) must return to its original mission of fighting infectious disease. In an op-ed published in the Wall Street Journal, Kennedy argued that decades of bureaucratic drift and politicized science eroded trust, culminating in disastrous COVID-19 policies. He outlined a reform agenda aimed at transparency, scientific rigor, and effectiveness over ideology.
Key Details:
- Kennedy wrote that the CDC’s COVID response was “irrational,” with mandates such as cloth masks for toddlers, arbitrary distancing rules, and prolonged school closures.
- He argued that only “half of the CDC’s budget supports its infectious-disease mission” and that fewer than 1 in 10 employees are epidemiologists.
- Kennedy outlined six core priorities to “make America healthy again,” including enhancing disease detection, modernizing infrastructure, and rebuilding the workforce of disease detectives.
Diving Deeper:
In his op-ed, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. did not mince words when assessing the agency he now oversees: “The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was once the world’s most trusted guardian of public health… But over the decades, bureaucratic inertia, politicized science and mission creep have corroded that purpose and squandered public trust.”
He traced much of the dysfunction to COVID-19, pointing to policies he described as both ineffective and destructive: “That dysfunction produced irrational policy during Covid: cloth masks on toddlers, arbitrary 6-foot distancing, boosters for healthy children, prolonged school closings, economy-crushing lockdowns, and the suppression of low-cost therapeutics in favor of experimental and ineffective drugs.” According to Kennedy, the consequences were dire, as the U.S. represented just 4.2% of the world’s population but suffered 19% of COVID deaths.
Kennedy argued that the CDC has drifted far from its founding mission. “Today, only half of the CDC’s budget supports its infectious-disease mission. Fewer than 1 in 10 employees are epidemiologists. That drift explains much of the agency’s disastrous pandemic response,” he wrote. He criticized the Biden administration’s restructuring, saying it emphasized “health equity” instead of correcting the agency’s core failures.
The op-ed highlighted a recent test of reform: the CDC’s swift response to a measles outbreak in Texas. Kennedy explained that the agency quickly deployed vaccines, therapeutics, and resources to contain the outbreak, a strategy he said succeeded because it was free of ideological distractions: “That response was neither ‘pro-vax’ nor ‘antivax.’ It wasn’t distracted by ‘equity outcomes’ or politically correct language like ‘pregnant people.’ It was effective. And effectiveness—not politics—will be the watchword of our leadership.”
Looking ahead, Kennedy laid out six pillars for the agency’s revival: strengthening disease detection, building infrastructure, modernizing systems, investing in workforce development, enhancing scientific rigor, and empowering state and local health departments. He emphasized that these reforms will be guided by transparency and integrity: “The American people elected President Trump—not entrenched bureaucrats—to set health policy. That is the MAHA commitment—make America healthy again—in action.”
Kennedy concluded by stressing that trust must be rebuilt: “First, the CDC must restore public trust—and that restoration has begun. It won’t stop until America’s public-health institutions again serve the people with transparency, honesty and integrity.”
Daily Caller
Trump’s ‘Massively Ambitious’ Nuclear Power Goals Might Save US From Rolling Blackouts

From the Daily Caller News Foundation
By Audrey Streb
While the Trump administration has been sounding the alarm over an imminent national energy crisis, it has also set aggressive nuclear expansion goals that industry insiders told the Daily Caller News Foundation may be achievable despite their ambitious scale.
The Trump administration has set a goal to quadruple nuclear power in the U.S. by 2050 and has moved to boost the energy technology through a smattering of executive actions. Though not every nuclear target outlined by the administration may be met, Trump has signaled that the U.S. could dramatically expand nuclear power in the coming years which is vital as blackouts loom and the artificial intelligence (AI) race accelerates, industry insiders told the DCNF.
“It’s going to be tough, but America has stepped up to plenty of major challenges like this in the past,” Benjamin Reinke, senior vice president of nuclear company X Energy and former executive director of the Office of Strategic Planning in the Department of Energy (DOE) under Trump’s first administration, told the DCNF. “Renewed focus on energy reliability certainly is a tailwind for the nuclear sector because of the attributes of advanced nuclear power. The opportunity to capture and win the global AI race with China is something that the U.S. has [to do].”
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President Donald Trump signed four May 23 executive orders to clear hurdles for nuclear energy and set ambitious goals to expand the industry. Several nuclear energy sector insiders that spoke with the DCNF are gambling that America will be able to accomplish several of the goals outlined by the Trump administration, even if they are hesitant to believe that power generated from nuclear power could quadruple as soon as 2050.
Several energy insiders warned that it is vital to expand nuclear power now as it is a highly reliable energy resource, and widespread rolling blackouts are being forecasted by several analyses including one July report by the DOE that states blackouts could increase by a factor of 100 by 2030. Power demand is surging for the first time in decades and electricity consumption is projected to surpass the all-time 2024 high, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
As the sector continues to boom, the industry will bring new jobs, technological innovations and power-hungry data centers. Nuclear advocates argue that the energy resource is well equipped to do the heavy lifting for the U.S. power grid.
Nuclear power plant generation has been declining in the U.S. since the 1990s and America has only managed to build two large nuclear reactors in the last 20 years. The newest reactors came online in Georgia nearly two decades after the projects began, running billions over budget and years behind schedule.
Big Tech is looking to nuclear as an attractive option to power its data centers and has considered adding small modular reactors (SMRs) as well as reviving shuddered nuclear plants to solve their power problems. Several states are seeing a revival in nuclear technology, with Microsoft making a deal to resurrect Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania and New York moving to open a new reactor after shuddering one just a few years ago. Additionally, the Michigan Palisades plant scheduled to reopen in October will mark the first defunct nuclear plant to return from the dead.
“Unlocking nuclear energy will be critical for meeting growing demand for affordable, reliable baseload power needed to fuel the AI race – our next Manhattan Project – while powering Americans’ homes and businesses,” a DOE spokesperson told the DCNF. “Thanks to President Trump’s
Reinke noted that Trump’s policies during his first administration started to breathe life into the nuclear sector, and former President Joe Biden also moved to forward nuclear technology through signing the ADVANCE Act. However, Biden’s energy policy focus centered around pushing for wind and solar projects, which some energy experts, grid operators and grid watchdogs have argued primed America’s power grid for outages.
“Energy security is national security,” Reinke said, echoing the phrase that Trump’s DOE repeated during the president’s first administration and is yet again a common slogan among cabinet members in the energy space.
“Folks are going to be without power,” Chief Development Officer of the Nuclear Company Juliann Edwards told the DCNF, referencing DOE’s July report. “By 2030 we’re going to start to see massive deficits in various parts of the United States. … The role nuclear plays is [that] it balances that baseload energy, so you have less volatility on the lines.”
The Nuclear Company is partnering with Palantir to boost nuclear development and is looking to develop its first fleet of reactor sites by the mid 2030s. Edwards noted that the Trump administration opening up federal lands for nuclear development “was huge because it opens up a lot of opportunities that didn’t exist before.”
DOE announced its initial selections for a nuclear reactor pilot program in line with one of Trump’s executive orders aimed at advancing 11 projects on Aug. 12. Among the selections was the nuclear company that designs and deploys reactors known as Oklo, the only selection chosen for more than one nuclear project.
Communications manager at Oklo, Paul Day, told the DCNF that Trump’s nuclear goals are “massively ambitious,” though they mirror America’s power needs.
“But I think it’s almost like a manifestation — we need this power. How are we going to get it? If we put our heads to the grind, we can actually get nuclear to do this,” Day told the DCNF. “Whether we can quadruple nuclear capacity by 2050, well, that remains to be seen. But there is an enormous amount of dead wood being cleared out here for the nuclear industry, and I think that will take us … in the right direction.”
Head of communications at Oklo Bonita Chester emphasized that the Trump administration has translated its nuclear ambitions into actionable steps that look promising to those in the industry. The Trump administration wants to have three reactors go critical by July 4, 2026, which is “highly ambitious, but what I’ve appreciated about this administration is they have been able to back a lot of these really quite dramatic plans with actual actions,” Chester said.
Chester added that fuel remains to be a huge hurdle for the nuclear industry. Advanced reactors need particular kinds of fuel, and Chester listed enriched uranium, recycled nuclear fuel waste and plutonium as viable options. Currently, the U.S. cannot supply enough fuel to power the influx of nuclear reactors, Chester added.
During his presidency, Biden designated nearly 1 million acres in Arizona outside the Grand Canyon as a monument, which shut down potential uranium development in the resource-rich area. The U.S. is a net importer of uranium and has been since 1992, according to EIA data. Canada and Kazakhstan are the biggest uranium suppliers to the U.S., according to EIA.
One of Trump’s executive orders included calling for the conversion of surplus plutonium to allow the private sector to use it, which has “never been considered before, and it’s incredible,” Chester said.
Changes at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) are also a good sign for the sector, as Trump limited the wait time for permits to 18 months.
“We’ve never seen the NRC being so vocal about this stuff,” Chester said, noting that the NRC has been very public about reviewing projects ahead of schedule. Energy policy experts previously explained to the DCNF that permitting delays presented a major obstacle for the nuclear industry.
Notably, Chester told the DCNF that fast reactors have been commercialized in China and Russia, yet not in the U.S. where they were invented.
“We would be failing if we were just trying to turn on one reactor,” Chester said. “The goal is to commercialize our technology.”
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