
Kari Lake sends firing plan to Congress that will leave Voice of America with only 18 employees
Less than a week after more than 500 contractors were terminated from Voice of America, U.S. Agency for Global Media senior adviser Kari Lake sent Congress a letter detailing her reduction-in-force plan to eliminate most of the roughly 800 full-time employees remaining at the government-funded news outlet.
In her letter sent on Tuesday to Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs chairman James Risch (R-ID), which was obtained and reviewed by The Independent, Lake referenced Donald Trump's executive order in March that called for the reduction of all 'non-statutory components and functions' to be eliminated from the agency, which is the agency that oversees VOA and other state-run media outlets.
Noting that the president directed that the agency needed to reduce its 'associated personnel to the minimum presence and function required by law,' she laid out a firing plan that would bring the number of VOA positions down to just 18, while the entirety of the media agency would have a staff of just 81.
The Washington Post first reported on Lake's letter to Congress.
According to the plan, which Lake said was developed by career government staffers, Voice of America would have just 11 employees manning the network's broadcast operations, VOA news center and FM programming. Two employees each would handle the Farsi, China and Afghanistan broadcast services, and the network will retain a director.
Additionally, roughly 13 people across the media agency will be designated as 'senior executive service,' which includes the VOA director, the agency's CEO and the director of the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which is headquartered in Florida.
The media agency will also retain 17 support positions, most of which are designated 'back office support' and entail security, finance and human resources. Another two staffers will handle engineering and transmission.
Notably, the Office of Cuba Broadcasting will keep all 33 of its staff, with the agency plan stating that based on Trump's executive order, 'the recommendation is to retain all positions in the Miami, FL and Marathon, FL competitive areas based on the statutory requirements for Cuba broadcasting.'
Lake and the media agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Lake – a former TV anchor and twice-failed Arizona political candidate – boasted to The Washington Post last month about how she'd 'continue to scale back the bloat at [the agency] and make an archaic dinosaur into something worthy of being funded by hardworking Americans. She added: 'Buckle up. There's more to come.'
With Voice of America being reduced to less than a skeleton staff, especially as it had roughly 1,300 full-time employees and contractors before the president's order, the assumption is that much of VOA's news programming going forward will be filled by MAGA cable channel One America News, which Lake made a deal with last month as a content provider.
The majority of VOA's staff have been on paid administrative leave after the president ordered the media agency to be cut down, which was portrayed as part of the administration's push to reduce the federal bureaucracy.
Employees of VOA are currently suing the Trump administration, saying the president doesn't have the authority to dismantle the outlet as it was created by Congress. However, while a federal judge issued an injunction in late April that would have allowed the employees to return to work, an appellate court stayed the majority of that ruling, leaving staffers stuck in limbo.
Since then, Lake has brought back a couple of dozen VOA employees to keep the network staffed at a 'statutory minimum.' The staffers who have returned to work, however, state that they are 'angry most of the time' and the 'amount of programming that's being produced is not a credible replacement for what was on air before.'
Reacting to the new reduction-in-force plan that would eliminate essentially the entirety of Voice of America, the plaintiffs in the current lawsuit seeking to block the president's executive order lamented over the tragedy of the network's impending death.
'It is absurd to slash an agency with a staff of over 1300 down to 80 and say it can still function according to what's mandated by law,' VOA White House bureau chief Patsy Widakuswara. 'And only 17 of those positions are allocated for VOA journalists and broadcast technicians. You can't make staff this size produce content for a global audience of 360 million weekly. It's comical if it weren't so tragic – we're not just losing our jobs and journalism, we are abdicating our voice and influence in the world.'
Jessica Jerreat, Voice of America's press freedom editor, said VOA's success and value 'has always been its ability to reach foreign audiences in their own languages with news about US ideals and policy.' Noting that many of its foreign-language broadcasts around the world helped 'break through censorship' and countered 'the spread of Russian disinformation,' Jerreat expressed concern about the void that will now be left.
'The US is a global leader,' she told The Independent. 'That role has been reflected in the languages VOA broadcasts. Cutting those services from 49 to 4 cuts the US off from the global conversation.'
Kate Neeper, Director of Strategy and Performance Assessment at the media agency, also bemoaned that Lake's plan 'seeks to end a decades-long mission of providing news and information in repressive media environments around the world, particularly those targeted with propaganda by America's adversaries.'
'It would entirely abandon major world regions where China and Russia have massive media operations, including Africa, Latin America, Russia and Eurasia, and Southeast Asia,' she continued. 'The plan also eliminates every agency function tasked with measuring and evaluating the effectiveness and reach of programming, eliminating the agency's ability to understand its own performance and fulfill mandatory government accountability processes.'
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Cruel trainer caught straddling dolphin A trainer at Dubai Dolphinarium was investigated for alleged animal abuse after video emerged of her sitting on the back of one of the animals. The footage, captured at the UAE tourist attraction in 2019, shows the female trainer sitting on a dolphin's back for around six seconds before it dives into a pool. Experts said the stunt could easily have damaged the dolphin's organs because the mammals cannot support their own body weight outside of water, so adding the weight of a human on top of that risks causing serious harm. Campaigners identified two trainers who they said were responsible for the video, both of whom deleted their accounts after the incident. A spokesman for the Dolphinarium, which opened in 2008, confirmed at the time that an investigation was underway but refused to discuss it further. Dr Elsayed Mohammad, Regional Director of the International Fund for Animal Welfare, told Gulf News: 'It is well known that the body of dolphins is very sensitive. 'The dolphin's body is not adaptable to any pressure outside water. Pressing the abdomen of the dolphin to the floor can easily harm its internal organs. 'If you punch the abdomen of a person, you can imagine how painful it is. 'Regardless of whether it's a few seconds or not, it's wrong. It is animal cruelty.' The Dubai Dolphinarium is a popular tourist attraction which offers people the chance to watch dolphins and seals perform circus-style tricks in daily shows. The 45-minute performances include the animals dancing, singing, juggling, playing ball, and jumping through hoops. Guests can also pay extra for a 'swim with dolphins' experience, which involves being hauled along while clinging to the animal's belly fins or dorsal fin. World's saddest orca Heartbreaking footage taken in 2024 showed a captive killer whale laying almost motionless whilst staring at the gate to his enclosure for 24 hours straight. Kshamenk, a 35-year-old Orca, is being held in a tiny pool at Mundo Marino, Argentina's largest aquarium. Shocked visitors have accused the park of holding the killer whale in cramped conditions with restricted movement and in total isolation from its own species. A 24-hour timelapse filmed by campaign group UrgentSeas shows Kshamenk languishing motionless with his face pointed directly towards the enclosure's gate as if asking to be let out. Kshamenk - previously described as 'the world's loneliest Orca' - was first brought to Mundo Marino in 1992 after being captured off the Samborombón Bay on the coast of Buenos Aires. According to the aquarium, the then three-year-old orca was found beached on the bay by three fishermen along with three other killer whales. Kshamenk was then taken to his concrete tank at the aquarium, where he has spent the last 32 years. His tankmate Belen died in 2000, at the age of 13, meaning that he has reportedly spent the last 24 years in total isolation from his own species. UrgentSeas, a non-profit organisation advocating to end marine captivity, is campaigning to free Kshamenk and bring him to an open sanctuary with other orcas to socialise with. He is now the last remaining captive killer whale in Argentina. A spokesperson from the organisation said: 'We continue to work with Argentinian activists and members of Congress to try to highlight and address his cruel world. 'He needs to be removed from his tiny concrete tank and to join other members of his species before it's too late.' Petitions calling for Kshamenk to be released to the wild have garnered tens of thousands of signatures. But, in a statement sent to ABC News, Mundo Marino said this is 'impossible'. The statement read: 'We are aware of what some activist groups believe about a hypothetical reintroduction; we respect their position, but the reality is that this is a proposal without a consistent scientific basis. 'It is impossible for Kshamenk to return to the sea without putting his life at serious risk.' Manatee kept in solitary confinement Drone footage exposed how a 69-year-old manatee named Romeo had been left to live out his twilight years alone in tiny 30ft concrete pool. The heartbreaking video, taken in 2023, shows the gentle creature using one flipper to swim in dizzying circles in his isolated, murky cage at Miami Seaquarium. Manatees are semi-social animals and 'suffer psychologically when not living in pairs or groups' - but Romeo had been alone for years after being separated from his partner, and the mother of his offspring, Juliet. But, although it's rare for stories of animals kept in captivity to have positive outcomes, Romeo was one of the lucky ones. The clip went viral and led to more than 20,000 people signing a petition putting pressure on the Florida aquarium to release him. And, in December 2023, their wishes were granted and the gentle giant was finally freed from his miserable prison. The Manatee Rescue & Rehabilitation Partnership (MRP) successfully transported three manatees – Romeo, Juliet and Clarity – from Miami Seaquarium (MSQ) to SeaWorld Orlando and ZooTampa. The transportation was a tremendous struggle due to the animals' size, weight and health condition. But accompanied by specialized vehicles and an experienced team of vets and animal care specialists, all three made the trip safely. In a report released earlier that month the USDA cited the Miami Seaquarium for alleged insufficient animal care and staffing problems - and lambasted them for their treatment of Romeo. The report said that Romeo had been housed alone in his enclosure because the three other manatees he was living with were released back into the wild in the spring. And despite numerous attempts to acquire another manatee the Seaquarium did not meet the requirements to do so. The report noted: 'Although numerous attempts have been made to acquire another manatee it was determined the facility did not yet meet the requirements to receive another animal. 'Manatees are semi-social animals and do better medically and psychologically when they are housed in pairs or groups.' Miami Seaquarium also housed the 'loneliest whale in the world', Lolita before she died. The facility was ordered to close and vacate its premises on April 21, 2024. Killer whales left to die France's last two captive killer whales are stranded in an abandoned algae-infested Marine park, neglected with the exception of a skeleton staff that comes in intermittently to feed them. In a nearby smaller tank, 12 bottlenose dolphins are the only other occupants of the facility, who have been stuck in bleak living conditions since January. The majestic creatures remain confined in Marineland Antibes, a French marine park near Cannes that shut its doors four months ago. Disturbing drone footage released by animal activist group TideBreakers shows the orcas Wikie, 23, and her 11-year-old son Keijo wandering aimlessly around the abandoned park. The video also shows the algae-infested pool where the remaining dolphins are kept. But despite their despairing condition, French authorities have yet to identify a suitable site in Europe for the orcas and have rejected a proposed move to a marine zoo in Japan. Marketa Schusterova, co-founder of TideBreakers, said: 'The situation in Marineland Antibes is an emergency and needs worldwide attention. 'These are the last two remaining orcas in captivity in France and they should be moved quickly. 'The orcas need to be removed from dangerous conditions that are posing significant risks to their health and safety.' The marine park closed on January 5, citing legislation banning shows featuring cetaceans such as dolphins and whales, which the French government passed in 2021. Since then, the management for Marineland have been shuffling through various options for where to rehome the animals, especially the orcas. Though Marineland has closed as a marine zoo business, they are still legally responsible for the welfare of the animals until they are rehomed. The orcas were both born in captivity so could never survive in the wild. Animals trapped in filthy tanks Dolphins housed at Florida's Gulf World Marine Park have finally been relocated after they were reportedly left to rot and swim in their own filth. Activists demanded the animals be moved after five dolphins have died there in less than a year. It comes after the facility's company went bankrupt in March and could not afford to maintain it. Campaigners believe the conditions were so bad that dolphins had started going blind after they were filmed swimming with their eyes 'jammed shut' in murky water. Campaigners believe the conditions were so bad that dolphins had started going blind after they were filmed swimming with their eyes 'jammed shut' in murky water The rough-toothed were transported to Clearwater Marine Aquarium on June 4 and authorities have launched an investigation into their former home. Despite activists voicing concerns over the well-being of the marine life at Gulf World the park remained open until May 30. Until then dolphins were forced to perform tricks for crowds and endure human encounters with customers who pay £97 to swim in their enclosure. A scathing report released earlier this year exposed the dire living conditions of the animals housed at the park. It raised a litany of concerns such as dolphin holding tanks filled with algae, broken water filters, lack of shade, and deteriorating facilities. The filter in one of the dolphins' tanks stopped working last November, and the filter in the second tank only works at 50% capacity, meaning they have reportedly been swimming around in their own filth for six months. Meanwhile, green algae has started growing in the crumbling tanks and inspectors from the US Department of Agriculture scraped nearly six inches of the plant off the step of one of the pools. The animals had been moved to a separate pool so staff could 'shock' the water with granular chlorine to treat the algae growth. But the harsh chemical can cause blindness in dolphins after repeated exposure and and aerial footage from campaign group Tidebreakers suggested the poor water quality had started to cause health problems. Five dolphins at Gulf Word have died in mysterious circumstances within six months including one in March that landed on its head in front of children in a shallow part of the pool. Jett, who was 14 and had lived his entire life at Gulf World, dove head-first into the shallows during a show, causing a fatal brain injury. Crying park staff had to escort families out of the arena so medics could treat the dying animal. Experts later suggested Jett could have misjudged his jump due to the murkiness of the water, which has been the subject of concern for months. Three more dolphins died within a week of each other last October. Gus, 14, was euthanised for a life-threatening condition, 15-year-old Turk contracted a bacterial lung disease, and Nate, 20, died from systemic infection, according to the Marine Mammal Inventory Report. The most recent fatality came just one week ago when a dolphin called Samira died. The World's loneliest dolphin Honey, the 'world's loneliest dolphin', died in 2020 after spending two years alone in a tiny tank at a derelict aquarium. The creature - who had spent her life in captivity - was abandoned at the Inubosaki Marine Park Aquarium in Japan along with dozens of penguins in 2018. Activists campaigned to free the animals but their efforts were unsuccessful and Honey never escaped her gloomy prison. The operator of the park shut the facility following a decline in visitors after the 2011 earthquake and Fukushima nuclear crisis. But, Honey and 46 penguins, along with hundreds of fish and reptiles, were left behind, an official with the Chiba Health and Welfare department said. Photos and video taken by activists from outside the park at the time show Honey floating in a tiny pool in an eerily empty facility. In another picture, dust-covered penguins can be seen perched on a crumbling structure near a pile of debris. The female bottlenose dolphin was captured in 2005 near Taiji, a western port town that has become notorious for its annual dolphin hunt that was featured in the Oscar-winning 2009 documentary The Cove, Japanese media reports. The Dolphin Project attempted to intervene, reaching out to rescue Honey and the other abandoned animals. They even explored purchasing her from the new owners of the facility in an effort to offer Honey a peaceful retirement. However, by March 2020, it became clear that her health had deteriorated beyond recovery and she passed away.