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    Jobs unprotected, Russia-US reconnect and Trump naming offer

     
    TODAY’S LABOR story

    Trump reclassifies 50K federal jobs to ease firings

    What happened
    The White House yesterday finalized a policy that will allow President Donald Trump to discipline or fire roughly 50,000 career federal workers at will, putting them in the same category as political appointees. The 255-page rule, published by the Office of Personnel Management, strips longstanding job protections, including for whistleblowers, from tens of thousands of workers deemed to have policy-related roles. Trump will decide which positions get reclassified, OPM said.

    Who said what
    The new policy, which affects about 2% of the federal workforce, is the “biggest change to the rules governing the civil service in more than a century,” Reuters said, and it “targets employees that the administration sees as undermining the president’s priorities.” Civil service protections “put in place in the 19th century turned federal employment from a partisan spoils system into a professional workforce that is largely insulated from partisan interference,” The Wall Street Journal said. 

    Congress created a “deliberate division between career employees and political appointees” so “career officials with deep expertise” could offer policymakers unvarnished information “without fear of getting fired,” The New York Times said. OPM said its new rule “explicitly” prohibited political patronage, loyalty tests and political discrimination, but critics question whether this administration “can be taken at its word after a year of retributive firings, including the dismissal of several whistleblowers.”

    These newly reclassified workers won’t be able to bring their allegations of “wrongdoing, such as violating the law or wasting money,” to the independent Office of the Special Counsel, Reuters said, but will now have to raise their concerns with officials inside their agencies. That turns the Whistleblower Protection Act “into a bad joke,” Tom Devine, the legal director at the Government Accountability Project, told the Times. 

    What next?
    The new policy is already facing legal challenges, including from a group of federal worker advocates who argue it “ignores a 1978 law that provides job protections to career federal employees and limits at-will employment to political appointees,” the Journal said. Trump’s various attempts over the past year to “replace nonpartisan civil servants with employees who are ideologically aligned with the president” had “drawn 68 legal challenges” as of yesterday, the Times said, “and 61 remain active.”

     
     
    TODAY’S TKTK story

    US, Russia restart military dialogue as nuke treaty ends

    What happened
    The U.S. yesterday said it had agreed with Moscow to restart high-level military-to-military dialogue that was suspended shortly before Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. The thawing of bilateral ties grew out of talks in Abu Dhabi on ending the war. Yesterday also marked the end of New START, the last remaining nuclear arms control treaty between the U.S. and Russia.

    Who said what
    The U.S. and Russian militaries have maintained an emergency deconfliction line throughout Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, but “consistent military-to-military contact” is an “important factor in global stability and peace,” U.S. European Command said in a statement. The “resumption of regular dialogue” will also “enable Moscow to hold talks with Washington on security topics outside of the Ukraine conflict,” The Washington Post said. 

    The lapse of New START removes “last major guardrail constraining the nuclear arsenals of the two countries that together hold some 85% of the world’s warheads,” Axios said. U.S. and Russian envoys in Abu Dhabi had been “closing in on a deal to continue to observe” the treaty, but President Donald Trump cast “doubt on any formal extension.” Instead of “extending” New START, he said yesterday on social media, we should “work on a new, improved and modernized Treaty that can last long into the future.”

    What next?
    Trump’s post “said nothing about Vladimir Putin’s offer to hold American and Russian arsenals at current levels temporarily, leaving open the possibility of a renewed arms race,” The New York Times said.

     
     
    TODAY’S INFRASTRUCTURE Story

    Trump offers funds for his name on Penn Station, Dulles

    What happened
    President Donald Trump told Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) last month that he would unfreeze funds earmarked for a $16 billion New York infrastructure project, but only if New York’s Penn Station and Washington Dulles International Airport were renamed for him, several news organizations reported yesterday. Schumer declined. “There was nothing to trade,” a person close to Schumer told NBC News and Politico. Trump “can restart the funding with a snap of his fingers.”

    Who said what
    Trump froze funding to complete the Hudson Gateway rail tunnel (pictured above) connecting New York City to New Jersey in October, after threatening to punish Democrats for shutting down the government. White House budget director Russ Vought said the halt was to “ensure” the funds weren’t used “on unconstitutional DEI principles.” 

    Trump’s naming-rights demand “offers a fresh window” into his “ever-expanding effort to secure an outsized place in American history” by “branding nearly everything around him with his own name,” CNN said. He has already affixed his name to the Kennedy Center and U.S. Institute for Peace, as well as a class of battleship, a Trump Gold Card citizenship pathway and TrumpRx, a discount drug site launched yesterday. But attempting to “leverage the future of a massive infrastructure project to fulfill his own personal wishes” would be “perhaps his most audacious move yet.”

    What next?
    Trump putting “his own narcissism over the good-paying union jobs this project provides” is “ridiculous,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) said in a statement. “These naming rights aren’t tradable as part of any negotiations, and neither is the dignity of New Yorkers.” Without the funding, the Gateway project “is set to shut down indefinitely” today, Axios said. 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Nearly 50 years after a clean-energy experiment began beneath the University of Minnesota’s St. Paul campus, the technology is returning at scale. The technique, which uses groundwater deep underground to store summer heat and release it in winter, will soon provide low-emission heating and cooling for about 850 homes in a new mixed-use development. Researchers say the aquifer-based system, powered partly by solar energy, could cut household energy bills sharply and reduce emissions by up to 74%.

     
     
    Under the radar

    Nepal’s fake mountain rescue schemes

    Six travel and mountain rescue executives have been arrested and accused of conducting fake rescues on Nepal’s high mountains to scam millions of dollars from insurance companies. The arrests come as the South Asian nation tries to strengthen its economy by boosting the number of tourists climbing and trekking in its mountainous provinces. 

    Every year, thousands of climbers travel to Nepal to “scale the highest Himalayan mountains,” and tens of thousands more arrive to “hike the mountain trails” that lead up to the “base camps of these high peaks,” said The Associated Press. The terrain and weather can be unforgiving, and each year, several climbers die while hundreds are rescued, “suffering from extreme exhaustion, altitude sickness or other medical issues.” 

    This is where the trouble begins. In a series of insurance scams worth a total of $20 million, tour operators and rescue services have allegedly been faking documents and submitting false claims for medical emergencies that involved expensive helicopter evacuations from remote trekking areas. This large-scale fraud has “badly tarnished Nepal’s image as a tourist destination,” said The Kathmandu Post. 

    Nevertheless, Nepal is busy boosting its tourist climbing sector. It has made 97 of its Himalayan mountains free to climb for the next two years in a bid to encourage people to visit its more remote areas, generating jobs and income for locals. It’s not clear if there are plans to improve infrastructure in these areas and if the local communities will be able to cope with an influx of climbers.

     
     
    On this day

    February 6, 2022

    Queen Elizabeth II became the first British monarch to celebrate a Platinum Jubilee, marking a record 70 years since she ascended the throne upon the death of her father, King George VI. Elizabeth’s eldest son, King Charles III, recently stripped her middle son, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, of his titles and royal residence over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein. 

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Russia fears for its war cash’

    “U.S.-Russia nuclear treaty comes to an end,” the Arizona Republic says on Friday’s front page. “Russia fears for its war cash as West targets oil,” The Washington Post says. “ICE caseload crushing, judge told,” says The Minneapolis Star Tribune. “Cities take steps to restrict ICE agents,” The Boston Globe says. “GOP: Restrictions on ICE ‘unrealistic,’” says The Dallas Morning News. “Trump: Detroit elections corrupt,” says the Detroit Free Press; “Report: Trump attacking pillars of democracy.” Millions more “Epstein papers” later, “accountability is elusive,” USA Today says. “Tech founders offered Epstein access to deals,” The New York Times says. “‘Ignore it.’ Epstein files show how elites consoled him,” The Wall Street Journal says. “Sex trade in Super Bowl spotlight,” The Mercury News says, but “Bad Bunny hoping to set good example.”

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Point, Slytherin

    In China, “Harry Potter” villain Draco Malfoy has become an unofficial Lunar New Year mascot. The Mandarin translation of “Malfoy” is “Ma-er-fu,” which includes the words for both horse and fortune, “ringing especially auspicious” heading into the Year of the Horse, said the BBC. To mark the holiday, several e-commerce sites are selling “festive decor” featuring images of actor Tom Felton, who played Malfoy in the “Harry Potter” movies. The books and accompanying films remain “hugely” popular in China.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Chas Newkey-Burden, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Stefani Reynolds / Bloomberg / Getty Images; Andrew Harnik / Getty Images; Spencer Platt / Getty Images; Illustration by Marian Femenias Moratinos / Getty Images
     

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