logo
Trump criticizes ‘non-working holidays' on Juneteenth

Trump criticizes ‘non-working holidays' on Juneteenth

CNN5 hours ago

President Donald Trump took to social media Thursday on Juneteenth, a federal holiday, to criticize the number of 'non-working holidays' in the United States.
'Too many non-working holidays in America. It is costing our Country $BILLIONS OF DOLLARS to keep all of these businesses closed. The workers don't want it either! Soon we'll end up having a holiday for every once working day of the year. It must change if we are going to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!' Trump wrote in a post on his Truth Social platform.
Juneteenth is the oldest regular US celebration of the end of slavery. It commemorates June 19, 1865 – the day that Union Army Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger rode into Galveston, Texas, and told a group of slaves that the Civil War had ended and they were free - more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.
During Thursday's White House press briefing, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Trump was unlikely to mark the federal holiday.
'I'm not tracking his signature on a proclamation today,' Leavitt said. 'I know this is a federal holiday — I want to thank all of you for showing up to work. We are certainly here, we're working 24/7 right now.'
Trump has previously tried to take credit for making Juneteenth 'very famous,' saying during his first term in 2020 that, 'nobody had ever heard of it.' His comments came while the nation was reeling from ongoing civil unrest after George Floyd's death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers.
Trump had previously pledged to make Juneteenth a federal holiday during his 2020 presidential campaign. Juneteenth didn't become an official holiday until 2021, under President Joe Biden's administration.
Since his reelection, Trump has made the elimination of DEI programs a centerpiece of his administration, cracking down on diversity efforts in the federal government with a series of executive orders.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Investing in Space: Iron Dome's performance could be Golden Dome's opportunity
Investing in Space: Iron Dome's performance could be Golden Dome's opportunity

CNBC

time44 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Investing in Space: Iron Dome's performance could be Golden Dome's opportunity

Israel and Iran resumed fire exchanges at the end of last week, and space and defense enthusiasts have been following the fusillades. Front and center has been the use of drones in this new leg of the conflict and the health of Israel's infamous Iron Dome missile defense system, as it fought off a barrage of drones and missiles. There's an inevitable connection: the Iron Dome's currently doing the job in Israel that U.S. President Donald Trump wants to get done at home through the proposed Golden Dome multi-layered missile defense system — a costly $175 billion concept so cutting edge that lawmakers and analysts have often questioned its viability. On one hand, you have the Congressional Budget Office warning that the project could cost as much as $542 billion. On the other, space and defense companies are chomping at the bit to fast-track Trump's ambitions from executively ordered vision to satellite-touting reality before the 2029 end of his term. "The performance of Israel's multi-tiered missile defense system underscores the urgent need to strengthen U.S. missile defenses. Thus far, Israeli missile defense inventories have kept up with the Iranian threat — buying decisionmakers valuable time to not just defend the goal but to score some," Patrycja Bazylczyk, research associate at the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Missile Defense Project, told CNBC by email. "U.S. policymakers should view this as a nod towards the importance of building inventories well before the fight, in the event of a missile attack from either Russia or China, we will be facing far more complex, and numerous salvos," she added. Like a Hollywood revenant, Golden Dome rose from the ashes of Ronald Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative — nicknamed "Star Wars" — that died a long death to a string of arguments over tech obstacles, steep price tags and the potential to kick off a new arms race with the Soviet Union. Unsurprisingly, Russia and China have been the starkest foreign detractors of Golden Dome, which sets out to defend the vast spread of the U.S. homeland from ballistic, hypersonic and cruise missiles through a web of satellites, sensors and interceptors. The timing isn't ideal — both superpowers doth protest too much at a point when the major arms control deal between Washington and Moscow, the New START treaty, is set to lapse next year without a successor, while U.S. talks on a similar topic with Beijing were suspended in 2024. Within the industry, Golden Dome looks like a mighty fine bone thrown to private space companies faced with severe budget cuts at key U.S. space contractor NASA. For the past few months, defense and space businesses have been vying for a slice of the project's pie, especially after Elon Musk's recent public feud with Trump left SpaceX's potential role in the scheme under question. Take a look at the Paris Air Show — a sprawling affair enveloping Le Bourget Airport in the northeast of the French capital every two years. Around 45% of this year's show is offering a stage to defense and security this year, and the likes of U.S. defense and aerospace manufacturer LockHeed Martin and Boeing used the platform to tout their Golden Dome credentials. "We clearly have a whole number of product lines that will contribute very well, that are going to fit very well with what is necessary to achieve the mission," Lockheed Martin President of Missiles and Fire Control Tim Cahill said, according to Reuters. Golden Dome's progressing, but time will tell if it's here to stay. On June 10, two Republican members of the House of Representatives, Rep. Dale W. Strong (AL-05) and Rep. Jeff Crank (CO-05) announced the formation of a Golden Dome Caucus that will work closely with the Senate's own initiative, in a bid to back Trump's plans. Meanwhile, the House Appropriations Committee unveiled the draft of its fiscal 2026 defense spending bill that features a cool $831.5 billion top spend line — and a $13 billion allocation for "missile defense and space programs to augment and integrate in support of the Golden Dome effort." That's a respective $8.8 billion and $4.1 billion for missile defense and space programs backing the project, in the fine print. Don't worry, there's a deal to be had: Trump's reassured Canada it can skip a newly upped $71 billion fee to enjoy Golden Dome's benefits — if it just becomes part of the United States. Even better, Washington could end up a trendsetter across the Atlantic. "I don't know about the Golden Dome in the U.S. and so forth, but I do believe that we have to create an integrated … missile defense system, also in the European perspective, and there are initiatives going in that direction," Micael Johansson, CEO of Swedish aerospace and defense company Saab, told CNBC's Charlotte Reed at the Paris Air Show. "We have to have a European setup around that, and we have that capability with all the companies in Europe."

Black leaders want Maryland Gov. Wes Moore held accountable, say racial wealth gap can't end without reparations
Black leaders want Maryland Gov. Wes Moore held accountable, say racial wealth gap can't end without reparations

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Black leaders want Maryland Gov. Wes Moore held accountable, say racial wealth gap can't end without reparations

BALTIMORE — Though Gov. Wes Moore announced actions toward ending the racial wealth gap Thursday, members of the Maryland Legislative Black Caucus say that cannot truly happen without discussing reparations. 'I don't think there is a bold Black agenda that does not include reparations,' Chrissy Thornton, the president and CEO of Associated Black Charities, said at a virtual town hall meeting of the Legislative Black Caucus Tuesday. 'There is no settling of the racial wealth gap without it.' In recognition of Juneteenth, Moore, a Democrat and Maryland's first Black governor, announced that he would be issuing nearly 7,000 more pardons for cases of simple cannabis possession, and is directing $400 million to communities that have historically been disinvested in by discriminatory policies. But members of Maryland's Legislative Black Caucus remain frustrated with Moore, who in May vetoed legislation that would have established the Maryland Reparations Commission. 'We should not be confused that an actual reparations agenda is disruptive to the political status quo,' said Dayvon Love, the director of public policy at Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, said at Tuesday's Town Hall. Del. Jheanelle Wilkins, a Montgomery County Democrat and chair of the Legislative Black Caucus, said that the caucus made its 'first ever historic call' to take action on reparations policy during the 2025 legislative session. The bill would have launched a two-year study into whether the state should provide reparations to Marylanders impacted by the state's history of slavery and racial inequity. The legislation, which was a priority of Maryland's Legislative Black Caucus, received broad Democratic support in both chambers of the Maryland General Assembly, and would not have provided any immediate benefit — financial or otherwise — to impacted Marylanders. The Maryland General Assembly will have the opportunity to override Moore's veto when it next convenes. Thornton warned the caucus not to pull back on holding Moore accountable just because he is Black. 'I think we need to push as forcefully as possible against what's happened with this veto, to have it overturned as we would if it was anyone else in elected office,' she said. 'I think we're in a moment where we have to be courageous and speak to accountability — no matter who's in the seat.' Moore said Thursday that he 'doesn't need any lectures' on the history of racism in the state of Maryland, and that the state has done four studies and commissions on these types of issues 'over the past 25 years, alone' — one of which First Lady Dawn Flythe Moore worked on. 'I have a fundamental disagreement with the General Assembly on what's required inside this moment,' he said. 'I believe this is a moment for action. I believe that this is a moment for action. I believe that this is a moment where we want to put together policies that are actually helping to address the harm that was … historically done.' Wilkins said that, though slavery ended 160 years ago, Maryland has never explicitly examined the issue of reparations, the harms of Jim Crow laws, enslavement and redlining. 'Our community called on us to take action on the issue of reparations,' she said. 'Repair is about progress, and it's long overdue.' ---------------

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store