Breaking Down the First 100 Days of Trump's Second Term
- President Trump's second term began with extensive federal funding cuts affecting Indigenous communities and their environmental programs across the U.S.
- These cuts resulted from the administration's drive for efficient spending and deregulation, despite ongoing underfunding and broad tribal concerns about legal and political dismantling.
- Key impacts include frozen grants exceeding $350 million for tribal nations, halted community environmental projects, and accelerated approvals for contested energy developments like the Oak Flat copper mine.
- Allison Neswood said the cuts are "particularly painful," noting public safety programs receive only 13% of needed funding, while health care is funded at half the required level.
- In response, more than 20 Native organizations united to create the Coalition for Tribal Sovereignty, which communicated to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum that they should not be held accountable for federal budget deficits nor suffer funding cuts that would negatively impact their communities.
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At the end of April, one hundred days into his second term, Donald Trump gathered ministers and members of the government in the Cabinet rooms at the White House.
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Total News Sources38
Leaning Left2Leaning Right1Center32Last UpdatedBias Distribution91% Center
Bias Distribution
- 91% of the sources are Center
91% Center
C 91%
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