Washington opened the week with a consistent, unmistakable theme: the return of the reckoning. From a top doctor publicly walking back controversial COVID policies, to the Supreme Court giving Trump temporary clearance to block billions in foreign aid, to the federal government filing death penalty charges in a brutal murder case — all signs point to a government actively undoing, confronting, or rewriting its recent past.
“I Was Wrong”: Doctor Walks Back Child Masking Support
At a Senate hearing on the politicization of science, Stanford infectious disease expert Dr. Jake Scott made a stunning admission: he was wrong to advocate for masking two-year-olds during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I changed my mind…I’m admitting it,” Scott said Tuesday under questioning by Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-OH), drawing applause from the room.
Scott had previously tweeted support for masking toddlers, in line with the CDC and the HHS Head Start program, which mandated face coverings for children as young as two until a federal judge intervened in 2023. But mounting data, including a 2021 JAMA Pediatrics study that showed increased carbon dioxide levels in masked children, has shifted public opinion — and scientific consensus.
Scott’s about-face underscores a broader reappraisal of pandemic overreach, especially policies affecting children. And in these hearings, the GOP is making it clear that the COVID reckoning is just getting started.
SCOTUS Lets Trump Withhold $4 Billion in Foreign Aid — For Now
In a major win for the Trump administration, Chief Justice John Roberts issued a temporary order allowing Trump to withhold $4 billion in foreign aid funds — despite a lower court ruling demanding the money be spent by September 30.
Trump used a tactic known as a “pocket rescission” to freeze the funds, which critics insist undermines Congress’s power of the purse. But the administration argues it’s a necessary assertion of executive discretion over foreign policy, especially when rushed aid packages clash with the White House’s diplomatic strategy.
“The Executive Branch would have to immediately commence diplomatic discussions with foreign nations — discussions the President considers counterproductive,” said Solicitor General John Sauer.
OMB Director Russ Vought defended the maneuver at last week’s National Conservatism Conference, saying the president still respects Congress’s role, but ultimately holds the reins on how — or whether — the money is spent.
For now, the aid freeze stands — but the broader legal battle over executive spending power is far from settled.
Federal Charges Filed in Charlotte Train Murder: DOJ Goes All In
Just weeks after the brutal, viral murder of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska aboard a Charlotte light rail train, the Trump administration has escalated the case to the federal level — and is pursuing the death penalty.
The suspect, DeCarlos Brown, has a long history of arrests and was diagnosed with schizophrenia. Despite a record of violent and erratic behavior, he was released earlier this year on a simple written promise to appear. Days before the murder, he was again arrested for misusing 911 to report that “something was controlling him.”
Zarutska, 23, fled the war in Ukraine in search of safety. Instead, she was murdered in cold blood on public transit by a man who never should have been free, according to Attorney General Pam Bondi.
“We will seek the maximum penalty for this unforgivable act of violence,” Bondi said Tuesday. “He will never again see the light of day as a free man.”
Brown is charged with committing an act causing death on a mass transportation system — a rare federal statute that carries eligibility for capital punishment.
This case now sits at the center of the Trump administration’s larger push to federalize prosecution of violent crime — a message that’s likely to feature prominently in 2026 midterm campaigns.
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