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  • The Week Evening Review
    Trump IRAs, Russia’s waning African power, and Scientology pranks

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    Will ‘Trump IRAs’ help the working class to retire?

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order last week creating a new pathway for working-class Americans to save for retirement. But what will the “Trump IRAs” actually accomplish?

    About 56 million Americans “lack access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan at work,” said CNBC. The president’s order in 2027 will create a new website, TrumpIRA.gov, where those workers can “research, compare and enroll in private-sector individual retirement accounts” on their own. 

    What did the commentators say?
    Trump’s new retirement plan “carries big political risks,” said The Wall Street Journal in an editorial. There’s “nothing to stop” Americans from setting up and contributing to their own IRA accounts without the government acting as a “broker and quasi-sponsor.” 

    But IRAs that come with a “government imprimatur” might “squeeze out other private savings options,” said the outlet. And helping Americans save for their senior years is a goal better achieved by “easing fiduciary regulations” for employer-sponsored plans while “bringing down inflation and growing real wages.”

    The president’s proposal requires Congress’ backing to “have teeth,” said Elizabeth O’Brien at Barron’s. Legislation is needed to expand income eligibility for the matching contribution and to “make participation in Trump IRAs automatic.” Without new laws to back Trump’s plan, this executive order will end up a “well-intentioned effort.” Workers can already open their own IRAs but often do not “due to lack of knowledge, time to navigate the process, or money to contribute.” 

    This plan does “little to solve” the broader issue of Social Security’s “deteriorating finances,” said Romina Boccia, of the Cato Institute, at The Washington Post. If the president and Congress really want to help Americans have a secure retirement, they could “instead focus on fixing” Social Security and help the seniors who “rely on the program as their primary source of retirement income.”

    What next?
    Workers making less than $35,000 a year will be eligible for a $1,000 matching contribution from the federal government, said NBC News. The Trump administration will work with Congress to “significantly expand this program,” said Kevin Hassett, the director of the White House’s National Economic Council, at the executive order signing, and is “looking forward to legislation this year.”

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    ‘We believe in voting and elections, and we believe in democracy. Even though we don’t always exercise it perfectly, at least we try to fake it.’

    Former President Barack Obama to The New Yorker on being “dismayed” by Congress’ obedience to Trump and the administration’s disregard for democratic fundamentals. We believe in “not politicizing the criminal justice system or politicizing the military,” he added.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Russia’s Africa-based power takes a beating 

    Russia’s Africa Corps is reeling after an alliance of separatist and jihadist groups in Mali launched a series of attacks on the country’s Putin-backed junta government in late April. Is this merely an instance of renewed violence in a country that has seen multiple coups this century already? Or does the bruising rebuke to a feared Russian expeditionary force indicate a crisis for one of West Africa’s most powerful benefactors?

    ‘Limits of Moscow’s reach and military might’
    The “series of reversals” experienced by Mali’s Moscow-backed military government has “dented Russia’s image as a self-styled security guarantor in Africa,” said Reuters. The recent violence also “threatens” Moscow’s “strategic and economic interests ​on the continent.”

    The attacks across Mali by “al Qaeda-linked rebels and mostly-Muslim Tuareg tribesmen” mark a “turning point in Moscow’s influence in West Africa,” said Fox News. Russia has been “grabbing Mali’s precious minerals” while promising to “protect the country.” But the “wave of coordinated, surprise attacks” by Malian rebels has “exposed the limits of Moscow’s reach and military might in the impoverished West African state,” said The Guardian.

    In recent years, Mali had “drastically pivoted toward Russia” as the junta pushed out Western governmental support, said The New York Times. And Russia has dispatched “thousands” of fighters from its Africa Corps, a military intelligence-run force that “provides security support to several African governments” in exchange for payment or “access to resources.” 

    Mali is part of a chain of African nations that Moscow has “worked hard to cultivate” for “geopolitical clout and access to mineral wealth,” said Irina Filatova, an honorary research associate at the University of Cape Town, to Reuters. So withdrawing from Malian sites during the attacks “punctures the claim that Moscow could deliver where France and other Western allies could not,” said Bloomberg. 

    ‘Reputational damage’
    The Africa Corps has “really lost credibility” in the region, said Ulf Laessing, the West Africa program lead at Konrad-Adenauer Stiftung, to Al Jazeera. Putin’s forces “just didn’t do their job — it’s reputational damage.” Now, Russia’s “collapse” in Mali presents Washington with an “opportunity to reassert the control it had foolishly relinquished,” said Zineb Riboua, a Hudson Institute fellow, at The Washington Post. 

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    $56 billion: The amount GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen has offered to buy eBay. The unsolicited bid breaks down to $125 per share for eBay, comprising 50% cash and 50% stock, according to GameStop. He sees a path to make the e-commerce company a much bigger competitor to Amazon.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    People are ‘speed-running’ into Scientology buildings

    Viral TikTok videos are circulating of people dashing through Church of Scientology centers in multiple cities. And while the Gen Z pranksters believe it’s harmless fun, the famously secretive religious group wants real consequences.

    What are the videos about?
    They feature participants “recording themselves ‘speed-running,’ as if in a video game, through Scientology’s buildings,” often “dodging screaming church members and security guards” until they are kicked out, said NBC News. The TikTokers are going inside these properties because Scientology is a “highly controversial organization known to be secretive, shrouded in darkness and mystique,” said Forbes. And the speed runners are trying to “rack up as many social media validation points as they can.”

    The fad began in Los Angeles, including at the religion’s Hollywood headquarters. After a speed-running incident in April, the Los Angeles Police Department began investigating the incident as an “alleged hate crime,” said the department to the Los Angeles Times.

    And these videos have since spread to other national and international cities. Detectives in New York City began investigating after “young people stormed and ransacked parts of the Church of Scientology in Midtown Manhattan,” said WABC-TV New York. 

    What has the response been?
    Church officials are taking the joke seriously, accusing the videos of perpetuating a religious hate crime. Scientology buildings are “peaceful spaces designed to welcome parishioners, visitors and members of the public,” said Scientology spokesperson David Bloomberg in a statement to The Guardian. 

    Actor Leah Remini, who left the organization in 2013 and has accused Scientology of widespread abuses, lambasted the speed runners on social media. Scientologists are “deeply indoctrinated and radicalized and believe they are helping people,” said Remini on X, and “running through a building is not going to break that or lead them to reconsider what they have given up their entire lives for.”

     
     

    Good day ☕

    … for coffee drinkers. Regular java consumption can positively influence the gut-brain axis, which connects the digestive system with brain activity, according to a study published in the journal Nature Communications. Coffee consumers have lower levels of inflammatory markers and higher levels of anti-inflammatory molecules. And while abstaining, some of these markers increase, suggesting coffee has a protective effect.

     
     

    Bad day 🏫

    … for easy solutions. There’s little academic benefit to school cellphone bans, according to a study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research. It’s hard to “move outcomes like test scores,” said E. Jason Baron, one of the paper’s authors. And there’s little effect on attendance, perceptions of online bullying, or in-class engagement.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Fashion royalty

    Music’s star couple Rihanna and A$AP Rocky arrive on the red carpet at the 2026 Met Gala in celebration of the exhibition “Costume Art” opening on Sunday at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She wore Maison Margiela by Glenn Martens, and he wore Chanel by Matthieu Blazy.
    Angela Weiss / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily sudoku

    Challenge yourself with The Week’s daily sudoku, part of our puzzles section, which also includes guess the number

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    Make Mother’s Day ever-so-memorable with these gifts

    Moms always seem to know exactly what you need. This Mother’s Day, it’s your turn to reciprocate with a present that’s exactly what she needs. There’s a gift for every mom and the other special women in your life in this guide. 

    Fly by Jing hot pot starter set 
    Everything she needs to have a “killer” hot-pot party is in this starter set, said Food & Wine. The kit includes an electric hot pot that fits on a tabletop and can feed up to six people and the “fiery” soup base containing ginger, star anise, clove and tingly Sichuan pepper extract. It’s the “gift that keeps on giving.” So expect dinner invitations for “years to come.” ($130, Fly by Jing)

    Lekfit Perfect cryoball 
    If she can’t go to the spa, bring the spa to her. She can pull this icy cryoball from the freezer or refrigerator and use it on her face and body when she wants to reduce puffiness, boost circulation and relieve tightness and inflammation. The Cryoball comes in a sturdy box, so she can travel with it and experience pain relief on the go. ($60, Lekfit)

    Brook & York Build Your Own birthstone stacking necklace
    Keep her family close to her heart. Choose up to six 14k-gold-plated brass charms, representing the birthstones of children, parents, siblings and other relatives. The stones dangle from a dainty 18-inch paper-clip chain, and you can mix styles (teardrop, baguette, round and mini round). (starting at $84, Brook & York)

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Nearly half of Americans (48%) hope for a peace deal with Iran, even if it makes things worse for the U.S., according to an ABC News / Washington Post / Ipsos survey of 2,560 adults. About 46% believe the U.S. should push Iran for better terms, even if it means resuming military action against it. 

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today’s best commentary

    ‘How inequality killed the affordable American car’
    Harold Meyerson at The American Prospect
    For “middle-class and working-class Americans, most new cars” are now “out of reach,” says Harold Meyerson. The “economists at GM and virtually every corporation clearly believe” that “focusing on selling more costly goods and services to the investment-enriched sector of the public will net their companies more money than the kind of ‘product for every purse’ marketing that thrived in that long-ago postwar economy.” The “gaps between the wealthy and everyone else are widening and accelerating.”

    ‘The fight over data centers is a distraction’
    Abdallah Fayyad at The Boston Globe
    Despite the “threats posed by AI, ranging from environmental to economic to privacy concerns, there’s little to no appetite in Washington to meaningfully regulate the industry,” says Abdallah Fayyad. The U.S. has “fixated on the one part of the story it can’t ignore, the part that’s having a tangible impact on community after community: the proliferation of data centers.” While “opposing data center construction may make for good politics, it isn’t moving the needle when it comes to regulating AI.”

    ‘Amsterdam’s ban on advertising hamburgers won’t stop climate change’
    The Washington Post editorial board
    Amsterdam “just banned all advertisements for meat in public spaces. Its justification: Eating meat contributes to climate change,” says The Washington Post editorial board. But “censoring ads for beef, pork, chicken and even fish won’t reduce carbon emissions nor will it make people less hungry for protein and other nutrients essential to a healthy diet.” Humanity will have an “easier time innovating out of the challenges posed by climate change if it’s not working on an empty stomach.”

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    intaglio

    An engraving or etching. Trump’s wall expansion along the southern border has damaged Las Playas, a rare Native American intaglio in the Arizona desert, according to residents. Construction has destroyed a 60- to 70-foot swath of the 200-foot-long ground etching that looks like a fish and is at least 1,000 years old, said Richard Martynec, a retired archaeologist.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Theara Coleman, Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis and Rafi Schwartz, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen P. Kelly / Getty Images; AFP / Getty Images; Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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