Guns: CT House approves bill to make lawsuits easier to file and gun permits harder to get
State legislators clashed Wednesday before approving a controversial bill that would make it easier to file civil lawsuits against gun manufacturers and make it harder for some residents to obtain a pistol permit.
After more than two hours of debate over the Second Amendment and liability in the state House of Representatives, the measure passed by 100 to 46 with five Republicans in favor and five moderate Democrats against.
House Republican leader Vincent Candelora of North Branford said the bill has multiple flaws in allowing more lawsuits against firearms manufacturers, marketers, distributors and retailers.
'Generally, the concern is that this is probably a trial lawyer's dream,' Candelora told reporters outside the historic Hall of the House. 'I don't think it does anything to make Connecticut residents safer from gun violence. It certainly will make lawyers a lot richer.'
Candelora added, 'This would be like making the car manufacturers liable for the accidents on our roads.'
The debate started at 12:37 p.m. and was completed by 3 p.m. Wednesday.
Moderate Democrats Kerry Wood of Rocky Hill, Jill Barry of Glastonbury, Patrick Boyd of Pomfret, Chris Poulos of Southington and Michael DiGiovancarlo of Waterbury voted against the bill. Five Republicans: Devin Carney of Old Saybrook, Tina Courpas of Greenwich, Tracy Marra of Darien, Chris Aniskovich of Clinton, and Tom Delnicki of South Windsor voted with the Democratic majority in favor.
State Rep. Craig Fishbein, the ranking House Republican on the legislature's judiciary committee, described the measure as 'groundbreaking legislation' in how the gun industry was being treated.
'There's never been a bill up here treating the alcohol industry in the same fashion,' said Fishbein, who voted against the measure. 'We don't have liability for the purveyor of that beer' in a fatal drunken-driving accident.
'I understand that there are people in this building who just don't like guns. I used to be one of them,' Fishbein said. 'It's already difficult to do business in this state. … Also, firearms can be dangerous. I got it.'
Rep. Steven Stafstrom, a Bridgeport Democrat who co-chairs the legislature's judiciary committee, said House Bill 7042 allows the state attorney general, as well as private citizens and cities and towns, to file civil lawsuits against those 'who fail to implement so-called reasonable controls in preventing the sale of firearms to straw purchasers, firearm traffickers, and individuals who are prevented from purchasing firearms under our laws.'
Stafstrom added that the bill is necessary because the federal Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, known as PLCAA, was passed by Congress in 2005 that 'provided special immunity protections just to gun manufacturers that are not available to almost any other product manufacturer out there.'
So far, nine other states have passed similar legislation to expand the possibility of gun-related lawsuits, including New York, New Jersey, California, Maryland, Illinois, Colorado and others.
'We didn't single out anyone. Congress did,' Stafstrom said. 'Connecticut will be the 10th state.'
The measure focuses on gun manufacturers and 'firearms industry members,' meaning that private sales between individuals would not be subject to the provisions of the bill, Stafstrom said.
Liability, he said, is important.
'We're not creating a new body of law here. This is product liability law 101,' Stafstrom said, adding that the Connecticut law is needed because the gun industry was 'singled out for immunity by Congress.'
At the committee level, the bill was debated in March during a six-hour hearing by the judiciary committee that brought out proponents and opponents.
The multi-pronged bill also makes it harder for some residents to obtain a gun permit if they committed crimes in other states. Currently, Connecticut residents who commit felonies and 11 'disqualifier misdemeanors' are not permitted to obtain a pistol or revolver permit. But residents who commit essentially the same misdemeanors in other states, and then move to Connecticut, are still able to obtain a permit.
The bill would cover anyone convicted of those misdemeanors in another state during the past eight years; they would now be blocked from getting a pistol or revolver permit, lawmakers said.
Under Connecticut's 'clean slate' law, convictions for certain misdemeanors are erased. But Connecticut's clean slate law does not apply to out-of-state convictions.
'Under current law, frankly we're treating our own residents more harshly than those who just moved into the state,' Stafstrom told reporters.
The misdemeanors in question concern 'violence against another person, extreme indifference to human life, inciting a riot, or possession of certain controlled substances,' Stafstrom said.
In a longtime oversight, police and attorneys somehow overlooked the provision in the law and never noticed that out-of-state convictions were handled differently, officials said.
When told about the different treatment depending on whether a person committed the crime out of state or in Connecticut, Gov. Ned Lamont said, 'It doesn't make much sense to me.'
On the House floor, Stafstrom said anyone who was engaged in the manufacturing of guns would be subject to the provisions of the bill.
Separately, attorneys for the families of victims of the shootings at the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown in 2012 filed a civil lawsuit under a different provision of the law concerning unfair trade practices. The provisions in the bill would be in addition to the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act, known as CUTPA.
A non-partisan legislative analysis provided comprehensive details on who would be covered.
'Under the bill, a 'firearm industry member' is a person, entity, or association (e.g., corporation or trade association) engaged in the manufacture, distribution, importation, marketing, or sale – wholesale or retail – of firearm industry products,' the analysis says. 'These products are firearms, ammunition or firearm magazines, unfinished frames or lower receivers – generally used to make 'ghost guns' – or rates of firearm enhancement (e.g., 'bump stocks') that are or were sold, made, or distributed in the state or possessed in the state and it was reasonably foreseeable that this would occur.'
State Rep. Doug Dubitsky, a Republican attorney who supports the Second Amendment, said some gun manufacturers have already left the state.
'Ruger used to manufacture almost all of their firearms in Connecticut, and now they do not,' Dubitsky said.
Dubitsky asked a series of questions on exactly who is determined to be a gun manufacturer and whether they would be covered by the bill.
'Yes, we are splitting hairs because this determines who will get sued,' he said. 'These people do this for a living. … You want to know who is going to be named.'
Guns, he said, are a different product under the Second Amendment.
'There is no constitutional right to buy a washing machine,' Dubitsky said on the House floor. 'There is no constitutional right to buy a car. … You can't buy a firearm if all of the gun manufacturers have been shut down.'
Rep. Greg Howard, a Republican who also serves as a longtime police officer in Stonington, said that liability is being deflected to other parties and away from the person who actually pulled the trigger in a gun crime. He said he has carried a gun every day for the past 23 years.
'When are we going to pin the tail on the donkey?' Howard asked on the House floor. 'When are we going to blame the criminals?'
Christopher Keating can be reached at ckeating@courant.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
22 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
It's a really bad time to be an expert in Washington
At the Pentagon, 14 advisory boards have been dismantled, with curt, thank-you-for-your-service notes sent to Democrats and Republicans alike. Some of the boards dealt with obscure matters. But others focused on vital issues, like rethinking the U.S. nuclear arsenal as China's nuclear buildup, Russian President Vladimir Putin's episodic nuclear threats and Trump's ambitious demand for a 'Golden Dome' missile defense system have changed the nature of nuclear strategy. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Also gone: the board of experts who were trying to learn lessons from China's astoundingly successful hack into the country's telecommunications networks -- where, by all accounts, the hackers remain to this day. Then came historians at the State Department and the climate specialists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which employed experts in weather, oceans, climate and biodiversity. Advertisement The National Weather Service lost so many people that the agency had to hire some back. No such luck for researchers relying on the National Science Foundation, where projects are disappearing every month. Advertisement No one killed off the expert advisory board at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as it deliberated whether healthy children should receive the COVID vaccine. They did not have to. While it weighed the pros and cons, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and his colleagues announced that they had already made their decision. When the history of these tumultuous past four months is written, it will doubtless focus on the moments when teams from the Department of Government Efficiency shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development, when the president issued tariff threats to much of the world and when he went to war with Harvard. Less noticed, perhaps, may be the devastation of the expert class, which once dominated the city, moving between think tanks and government offices, generating alternative views in its best moments, engaging in groupthink at its worst. Today, the experts are swelling the ranks of Washington's suddenly unemployed. To the MAGA faithful, each one of these disbanded groups is a victory for a trimmer government that follows the president's wishes. To them, the National Security Council was the heart of the so-called deep state, whose members testified against Trump during his first impeachment inquiry. The raft of advisory committees mostly slowed down decision-making, they argued, when they were not undercutting policies they did not like. Worse yet, they were the source of leaks. So if an advisory committee of experts was not needed to help James K. Polk, the 11th president, figure out how to spread the United States to the West Coast, why do we need them to figure out the strategy for adding Greenland and Canada? (The expansionist Polk has been restored to a place of pride in the Oval Office -- his portrait now hangs just below and to the right of Thomas Jefferson's.) Advertisement Part of Trump's problem with experts is their portrayal as neutral arbiters, more interested in the data than presidential spin. That is what has led to the White House this week trying to discredit the Congressional Budget Office, which concluded that, yes, the new tax bill could really add $2.4 trillion to the national debt, no matter the spin. Lacking the authority to fire the budget experts there, the White House turned to casting them as politically biased. And while every new president replaces board members and demands some fealty to the new leader's ideology, what has happened in the past four months seems to some in the federal government more like China's cultural revolution, where the only good ideas are the ones that flow from the leader, and both research reports and intelligence findings should support the president's desires. And when they are not, trouble follows. Just ask the National Intelligence Council, a small subset of intelligence experts -- many drawn from academia -- what happened when it came to the conclusion that the Venezuelan government was not controlling a criminal gang, an argument that Trump had used to justify deportations. The experts were told to 'do some rewriting' so the material could not be used against the president and Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence. After the intelligence findings were left unchanged, the board's leadership resisted and was removed. The whole institution is being moved into Gabbard's organization, where its independent judgments can be better controlled. Advertisement At the Environmental Protection Agency, self-protective action has replaced scientific inquiry. 'We've taken the words 'climate' and 'green energy' off every project document,' one scientist still in the government's employ said recently, refusing to speak on the record for obvious reasons. Veterans of Trump's first term say these changes are a manifestation of the president's bitter memories. 'I think somebody convinced President Trump, based on his experience in his first administration, that his own staff would be the biggest obstructionists,' H.R. McMaster, Trump's second national security adviser, said at a conference on artificial intelligence and national security Wednesday. (Trump's current national security adviser, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, is one of around a half dozen across both terms.) While McMaster, now at Stanford, said he did not object to shrinking the National Security Council staff, he worried that also lost would be the capacity to run 'a deliberative process, which I think would be kind of nice on some of these issues, like tariffs, to clarify what you are trying to achieve.' 'Deliberative process' appears to be exactly what Trump is trying to avoid. And if that means eviscerating the expert class, so be it. It helps explain why the Department of Government Efficiency was given license to wipe out USAID. McMaster is hardly alone in concluding that some of the aid agency's programs had 'drifted.' Many Democrats say they agree, though almost never on the record. But McMaster gave voice to the question raised all over Washington when he asked, 'Should you just crush the entire organization or recognize there is a mission for that organization to advance American interests?' It was crushed, with foreign service officers, child health experts and others locked out of the offices. And that has led to both professional and personal angst. Advertisement 'If you work in the field of maternal and child health, you are in trouble,' said Jessica Harrison Fullerton, a managing director at the Global Development Incubator, a nonprofit that is trying to fill some of the gaps USAID's dismantlement left. 'Not only are you devastated by the impacts on the people you have been serving, but your expertise is now being questioned and your ability to use that expertise is limited because the jobs are gone.' In fact, what many of Washington's experts discovered was that crushing the organizations -- and putting their experts out on the street -- was the point of the exercise. It helped create a frisson of fear, and reinforced the message of who was in control. It has also led to warnings from more traditional Republicans that Trump's demand for loyalty over analysis is creating a trap for himself. 'Groupthink and a blinkered mindset are dangers for any administration,' said Richard Fontaine, the CEO of the Center for a New American Security, which, in the days of bipartisanship, described itself as a bipartisan think tank. 'Pulling from multiple sources in and outside of government to develop solid options for foreign policy decision makers is the way to go.' Well, maybe in the Washington of a previous era. Within a 200-yard radius of USAID, DOGE teams moved into the Wilson Center, a nonpartisan foreign policy think tank that had significant private funding and money from Congress. They shuttered it, from its Cold War archives to the Kennan Institute, one of the country's leading collections of scholars about Russia. At a moment when superpower conflict is back, it was the kind of place that presented alternative views. Advertisement DOGE was unimpressed. Like their USAID colleagues in another part of the Ronald Reagan Building, they were soon stuffing their notes into cartons and discovering their computer access had been shut down. (The Wilson Center also sponsored book writers, including some from The New York Times.) The war on expertise has raised some fundamental questions that may not be answerable until after the Trump administration is over. Will the experts stick around -- after hiding out in the private sector or changing professions -- only to reoccupy the 'swamp'? And more immediately, what damage is being done in what may be the country's defining challenge: the competition with China over artificial intelligence, autonomous weapons, electric vehicles, quantum computing? That is what many in the intelligence agencies worry about, not least because Europe is already openly recruiting disillusioned American scientists, and China's intelligence services are looking for the angry and abandoned. Graham Allison, a Harvard professor who writes often on the U.S.-China technological and military competitions, told an audience at the AI Summit on Wednesday that America is not acting like it understands that 'China has emerged as a full-spectrum competitor.' 'Our secret sauce,' he said, has been the American ability to 'recruit the most talented people in the world. Einstein didn't come from America.' 'The idea that we would be taking action that would undermine that makes no sense to any strategic thinker,' he said. Of course, those strategic thinkers rank among the suspect class of Washington experts. This article originally appeared in


Politico
28 minutes ago
- Politico
Men in DC are getting their jawlines done
Washington is looking a little different lately — and not just politically. Even the faces of powerful men are beginning to change, as surgeons and dermatologists get more and more male clients looking to enhance their jawlines. 'The surgeons and dermatologists who treat the D.C. power class will never share their patients' secrets,' writes Joanna Weiss in this week's Friday Read. 'Some doctors strategically time surgeries during congressional recess, and many go out of their way to make sure their clients aren't even seen entering the office, using a spy-movie-like web of hidden entries and secret back doors. But they will also tell you that, among the political power set, jaws are currently hot.' In a government led by a TV-obsessed commander-in-chief, appearances are more important in politics than ever. And lately, it's the pursuit of a Chad-like chin that's driving men under the knife. After all, looking weak could be a vulnerability. 'Across the internet and the gossip-journalism universe, it's not hard to find speculation about the mandibles of everyone from the Trump sons to Elon Musk,' Weiss writes. 'And if you're watching TV and wondering if some D.C. figure has a jawline that's newly strong and square … well, you might be right.' Read the story. 'Time to drop the really big bomb: @realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public.' Can you guess who said this about the president? Scroll to the bottom for the answer.** Trump vs. Pride … Dupont Circle is the traditional heart of Washington's local gay community, but you won't see rainbow flags waving through the park for Pride this weekend, as the Trump administration has fenced it off. 'The Park Service claims this is to prevent damage by revelers,' writes Capital City columnist Michael Schaffer. 'But plenty of outraged locals see a more sinister motivation.' Wait, why is everyone talking about a breakup? If you somehow missed the spectacular scrap between Elon Musk and Donald Trump, study up on these talking points so your friends won't think you're living under a rock. (From Associate Editor Dylon Jones) — Make yourself sound like an expert analyst with a word of warning for Trump: 'Seventy-six percent of Republicans view Musk favorably — more than House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader John Thune and just about everyone else. He could become a real chaos agent who rocks Trump's midterm plans.' — As a political expert, you can speak to the bigger-picture divisions behind this feud: 'This is just the personification of the tech right vs. MAGA populist divide. This was inevitable ever since the H-1B visa debate picked up within the GOP coalition.' — Make sure to bring up Musk's main MAGA antagonist, Steve Bannon. 'Did you see that Bannon quote Rachel Bade got in POLITICO Magazine? 'MAGA's done with him.' He's even suggesting Trump consider deporting him.' — Bring in a dispatch from the podcast circuit for your liberal friends who never tune in: 'JD Vance told Theo Von that he hopes Musk comes back over to their side, but 'maybe that's not possible now because he's gone so nuclear.'' Is MAGA Losing the Tech Right? … Elon Musk's dramatic breakup with President Donald Trump isn't just a sign of two strong personalities that had become allies inevitably clashing. It's also a sign of two strong ideologies that had become allies inevitably clashing. There's the tech right Musk embodies, which supports H-1B visas that promote highly skilled immigration, and there's the MAGA populist right, led by Steve Bannon, that staunchly opposes immigration writ large. They had seemed to have struck an uneasy truce. 'But the renewal of hostilities between Trump and Musk this week shows that the underlying ideological disagreement between the two factions was never really resolved,' writes Ian Ward. Butterworth's Doesn't Care About the Bromance Blow-Up … The Musk vs. Trump earthquake was a tectonic event on the internet, but it hardly registered on the Richter scale over at Butterworth's, the fashionable MAGA bistro on Capitol Hill. 'As the denizens of Butterworth's saw things, the kerfuffle was simply the temper tantrum of a disgruntled administration official who'd run afoul of a popular president,' writes Ben Jacobs. 'And Trump's counter attacks dismissing the world's richest man as 'going CRAZY'? Now that was gospel.' Andrew Yang Has a Pitch for Elon Musk … Andrew Yang has been pushing his independent Forward Party for years. But the recent falling out between Elon Musk and President Donald Trump has given him a new opportunity to bring the world's richest man into the fold — or, at least, to try. 'Elon has built world-class companies from nothing more than an idea multiple times, and in this instance, you have the vast majority of Americans who are hungry for a new approach,' Yang tells Assistant Editor Catherine Kim. 'I'm happy to spell it out for Elon or anyone else who wants to head down this road: A third party can succeed very quickly.' From the drafting table of editorial cartoonist Matt Wuerker. Who Dissed? answer: That would be his erstwhile ally, Elon Musk, who dropped the allegation in a since-deleted post on X. politicoweekend@


Politico
33 minutes ago
- Politico
Playbook: The Great Un-Awokening
Presented by With help from Eli Okun and Bethany Irvine Happy Saturday. This is Adam Wren. Get in touch. President Donald Trump attends UFC-316 featuring Merab Dvalishvili vs. Sean O'Malley at 9:30 p.m. DRIVING THE DAY Ambitious Democrats with an eye on a presidential run are in the middle of a slow-motion Sister Souljah moment. Searching for a path out of the political wilderness, potential 2028 candidates, especially those hailing from blue states, are attempting to ratchet back a leftward lurch on social issues some in the party say cost them the November election. FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — NOT 2020 ANYMORE: Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who is Black, vetoed a bill passed by his Democratic-dominated state legislature that took steps toward reparations. California Gov. Gavin Newsom called it 'unfair' to allow transgender athletes to participate in female college and youth sports. And former Ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel — who sat down with our Dasha Burns for the latest episode of her podcast The Conversation, which is dropping tomorrow — has urged his party to veer back to the center. 'Stop talking about bathrooms and locker rooms and start talking about the classroom,' said Emanuel, the two-term Chicago mayor who said he is open to a 2028 presidential campaign. 'If one child is trying to figure out their pronoun, I accept that, but the rest of the class doesn't know what a pronoun is and can't even define it.' Each of these candidates are, either deliberately or tacitly, countering a perceived weakness in their own political record or party writ large — Emanuel, for example, has called the Democratic Party 'weak and woke'; Sen. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) has said the party needs more 'alpha energy'; others like Newsom are perhaps acknowledging that they had a more socially liberal bent in the past. On diversity, equity, and inclusion, some in the party are also sending a signal they're no longer kowtowing to their left flank. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg removed his pronouns from his social media bio months ago, and questioned how the party has communicated about diversity. 'Is it caring for people's different experiences and making sure no one is mistreated because of them, which I will always fight for?' he said in a forum about the future of the party at the University of Chicago earlier this year. 'Or is it making people sit through a training that looks like something out of 'Portlandia,' which I have also experienced,' Buttigieg said. Buttigieg added, 'And it is how Trump Republicans are made.' Moderate Democrats are having a moment and there is a cadre of consultants and strategists ready to support them. Ground zero for the party's great un-awokening was this week's WelcomeFest, the moderate Democrats' Coachella. There, hundreds of centrist elected officials, candidates and operatives gathered to commiserate over their 2024 losses and their party's penchant for purity tests. Panels on Wednesday featured Slotkin and Reps. Jared Golden (D-Maine) and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-Wash.), described as 'legends of the moderate community,' and the day included a presentation by center-left data guru David Shor, who has urged Democrats to shed toxic positions like 'defund the police.' Adam Frisch, the former congressional candidate and director of electoral programs at Welcome PAC, said his party is 'out of touch culturally with a lot of people.' 'I think a lot of people are realizing, whether you're running for the House, the Senate or the presidential, we better start getting on track with what I call the pro-normal party coalition,' Frisch said. 'You need to focus on normal stuff, and normal stuff is economic opportunity and prosperity, not necessarily micro-social issues.' Not every Democrat is retreating from defending liberal social stances. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz called it 'a mistake' to abandon transgender people. 'We need to tell people your cost of eggs, your health care being denied, your homeowner's insurance, your lack of getting warning on tornadoes coming has nothing to do with someone's gender,' he told The Independent last month. Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, too,recently said that it's 'vile and inhumane to go after the smallest minority and attack them.' This spring, Pritzker declared March 31 as Illinois' Transgender Day of Visibility. 'Walz, [Sen. Chris] Murphy, Pritzker, [Kentucky's Andy] Beshear — they're not going around talking about it all the time, but they're also not running away from their values,' said one adviser to a potential 2028 candidate granted anonymity to discuss the issue candidly. 'They're in the both-and lane.' But as Emanuel sees it, his party has a long way to go to over-correct for what he paints as the excesses of the last few years. 'The core crux over the years of President [Joe] Biden's tenure is the party on a whole set of cultural issues looked like they were off on a set of tangential issues,' Emanuel told Dasha. FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — A new internal poll from Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow's campaign, conducted by Global Strategy Group, of likely Democratic primary voters in Michigan shows the Senate primary as still up in the air. Rep. Haley Stevens leads with 24 percent, followed by McMorrow at 20 percent, and then former director of Wayne County's Department of Health, Human and Veterans Services Abdul El-Sayed at 15 percent, with former House Speaker Joe Tate at 4 percent. Thirty-seven percent are undecided. McMorrow is known by 31 percent of the primary electorate, 11 points behind Stevens, and EL-Sayed is known by 35 percent. The poll, conducted of 800 likely 2026 primary voters by telephone and text to web-based survey, was in the field between May 28 and June 2, and had a margin of error of +/- 3.5 percentage points. Read the full polling memo. 5 MINUTES WITH Welcome to '5 Minutes With,' a new Playbook weekend segment featuring a quick chat with a newsmaker. J.D. Scholten is boarding a bus not long before midnight somewhere in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, after pitching in relief for his Sioux City Explorers, a team part of the American Association of Professional Baseball, and losing 15-4 to the Sioux Falls Canaries. He notched one strikeout. 'I threw mop up duty at the end,' Scholten says as he waits for the bus driver to board. Five days ago, the 45-year-old Democratic Iowa state representative — who got back into baseball after two congressional races in 2018 and 2020 and realizing he could still throw 80 mph at a booth at the Iowa State Fair (and then 87 mph still after) — took on an even more unforgiving task: He launched a challenge to Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), after she told a town hall audience, 'We all are going to die.' Scholten thinks his time on the team has helped him win over swaths of red and rural America — including the men he plays with, and whom his party badly needs to win back. 'Politics isn't on their front of mind with them, like it is with myself,' Scholten says. 'And so I'm curious what they think about things, and how they word things, and different things like that. On the things I'm passionate about, I learned how to frame them in a way that gets them interested, say it in a way that speaks to them. One thing that a lot of these guys are all for is universal health care, because especially when I was their age too, they're in between, in the off season, they're just trying to survive.' Scholten launched his campaign, he said, to capitalize on the 'level of outrage' he said Ernst generated with her remarks. 'It was trying to just match that moment,' he said. 9 THINGS THAT STUCK WITH US 1. PRIDE VS. THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION: Today's WorldPride parade in Washington marks the 50th anniversary of the first pride celebrations in D.C. But the mood surrounding the parade and festivities is somewhat sour this year: The Trump administration's crusade against diversity, equity and inclusion programs broadly and transgender people specifically is rippling across the landscape, leading Pride to feel a bit downcast. Dupont Circle re-opened: Just hours before the official WorldPride parade kicks off, the National Park Service began removing the anti-scale fencing surrounding Dupont Circle park after the agency's decision to close the area sparked outrage among Washingtonians, Martin Austermuhle reports for The 51st. Earlier this week, the park service ordered Dupont Circle to be closed in order to 'secure the park, deter potential violence, reduce the risk of destructive acts and decrease the need for extensive law enforcement presences.' But to many Washingtonians, the move smacked of politics, given the Circle's centrality to the gay rights movement in the district. 'Dupont Circle is sacred ground for the LGBTQ+ community — a place with a rich history of protest, pride and joy,' Zachary Parker, an openly gay Democratic member of the city council, told POLITICO's Michael Schaffer. 'Closing it during one of the most significant global celebrations of our community sends the wrong message.' 'Rainbow-washing' meets the Trump era: Years of complaints from voices on the left about so-called 'rainbow-washing' — that is, when major corporations publicly tout their support for LGBTQ+ people during Pride Month without taking more concrete steps to help the community — have given way to a new question as corporate sponsorships dry up under Trump: Is 'rainbow-washing' preferable to the alternative of not supporting Pride events? Booz Allen Hamilton, the federal contracting giant, pulled out of being a headline sponsor of WorldPride in February. Other companies such as Deloitte, Comcast, Darcars Automotive Group and Nissan have declined to support the event this year despite contributing funding in previous years; some, like Nissan, have cited budgetary concerns as their reason for not participating. Similar stories abound across the country, as corporations roll back support for Pride out of fear of retaliation from the Trump administration, leaving many festivals strapped for cash, as POLITICO Journalism Institute's Rachael Dziaba reports for Playbook. In Washington, two months after Booz Allen dropped out, Capital Pride Alliance, the nonprofit that manages DC Pride, launched a 'Hate Is No Joke' fundraising campaign with an initial lofty goal of raising $2 million, according to the Washington Blade. The fundraiser's target has since been lowered to $1 million. As of Saturday morning, 'Hate Is No Joke' has amassed roughly $66,000. ('This is an on-going fundraiser with no definitive end to help us continue to raise funds even after WorldPride DC is over,' a spokesperson for Capital Pride told Playbook. 'We are on track for budgeted expectations for individual donations so far.') But some of those who've railed against 'rainbow-washing' see this all as a vindication. 'As the queer community, we should have never gone to corporations and expected that money to always be there,' said Jen Deerinwater, an organizer who is bisexual, a citizen of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma and participated in protests against corporate involvement in Capital Pride in 2017. 'Pride cannot solely constitute a parade with Deloitte floats and a concert series,' said Jack Petocz, who traveled to D.C. to attend WorldPride on behalf of the advocacy organization Gen-Z for Change. 'We will continue with or without the support of these major corporations, and truly go back to what Pride is all about: being a protest, being a liberatory force, and fighting for ourselves.' 'It's important to note that everyone has opinions on where funding for Pride should come from,' a spokesperson for Capital Pride told Playbook in a statement. 'A question may be, 'have the LGBTQ activists that you've spoken to, and who complain about corporate sponsorship actually donated to Pride themselves?' … [T]he major funders for most events, not just Pride, come from corporations. We did experience loss of support, but also received additional support from other new companies to help bridge that gap.' 2. RECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES: As the Senate reconvenes next week to continue hashing out the details of Trump's sweeping tax bill, CBO Director Phill Swagel is defending his agency from GOP lawmakers who believe its fiscal scoring of the megabill is 'too pessimistic' and 'tilts against Republicans,' WSJ's Richard Rubin scoops: 'What CBO is doing is what it is supposed to do, said Swagel, in his first direct response to GOP criticisms. … 'The tax cut is a tax cut. Revenue goes down,' Swagel said. 'There's improved growth, but not so much as to lead to the tax cut to pay for itself.'' One thing they agree on: Though the intraparty strife continues over the president's 'one big bill' — GOP lawmakers have united behind at least one thing: 'Amid the messy ongoing divorce between the president and [Elon Musk] … Donald Trump has sole custody of the House GOP,' POLITICO's Meredith Lee Hill and others report. 3. THE DOGE DAYS AREN'T OVER: The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that the Department of Government Efficiency can have 'unimpeded access to sensitive Social Security records for millions of people,' Josh Gerstein reports. In a three-paragraph ruling, the court's conservative majority lifted a lower-court order that had blocked DOGE 'from viewing or obtaining personal information in the agency's systems.' Though the White House claims that they need to access the data to root out fraud, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote in her dissent that the court's decision creates 'grave privacy risks for millions of Americans.' Another legal victory: In a second unsigned order yesterday, the high court also ruled that DOGE 'does not have to turn over internal records to a government watchdog group as part of a public records lawsuit' for now, per NYT's Adam Liptak and Abbie VanSickle. And despite the president's high-profile fallout with his former DOGE chief this week, the organization is likely here to stay, with staffers 'deeply embedded' across several federal agencies, per NYT: 'Whether DOGE keeps its current Musk-inspired form remains an open question … but the approach that DOGE embodied at the outset — deep cuts in spending, personnel and projects — appears to have taken root.' 4. RUSSIA-UKRAINE LATEST: The Russian barrage of drone strikes today targeting the eastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv killed at least three people and injured 21, officials say. The attacks 'included deadly aerial glide bombs that have become part of fierce Russian attacks in the three-year war,' per the AP. The attacks come mere days after Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin's phone conversation, where Putin said there would be retaliation for Ukrainian drone strikes. And back in Washington: As the White House weighs whether to ramp up punitive action against the Kremlin, Sen. Lindsay Graham (R-S.C.) is intensifying his calls for the White House to enforce 'bone-crushing' sanctions against Russia, POLITICO's Amy Mackinnon reports. 5. IMMIGRATION FILES: Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a native of El Salvador whose unlawful deportation under the Trump administration sparked a national uproar, is back in the United States and will be charged with federal human trafficking in Tennessee, ABC News reports. After confirming Abrego Garcia's return to the U.S. yesterday, federal officials unsealed the indictment alleging 'he participated in a yearslong conspiracy to haul undocumented migrants from Texas to the interior of the country.' Abrego Garica made his first related court appearance last night 'in the Middle District of Tennessee, answering 'Yes, I understand' in Spanish when U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes asked him if he understood the charges against him.' Abrego Garcia's lawyers claim the allegations should be ''treated with suspicion' because of the Trump administration's effort to publicly assail Abrego Garcia's character,' POLITICO's Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein report. AG Pam Bondi told reporters yesterday the 'intense scrutiny of Abrego Garcia had led to the break-up of the human smuggling ring he was allegedly involved in.' How we got here: 'Key moments that led to smuggling charges against Kilmar Abrego García,' per WaPo's Steve Thompson 6. SCHOOL DAZE: Education Secretary Linda McMahon said she is seeing 'progress' on the administration's demands from Harvard and Columbia University as Trump ramps up his pressure campaign against the nation's academic institutions, NBC News' Vaughn Hillyard and Alexandra Marquez report: 'And you know why I think we're seeing progress? We are putting these measures in place, and we're saying we're putting teeth behind what we're looking at,' McMahon told NBC. 7. BLURRED LINES: 'A Super PAC Is Encroaching on the DCCC's Territory,' by NOTUS' Alex Roarty: 'House Majority PAC is actively recruiting candidates, vetting their backgrounds and even potentially running ads on their behalf in competitive primaries … The belief among some strategists is that House Majority PAC's ramped-up involvement this cycle represents a shift in how the Democratic party approaches House races, one in which the super PAC assumes more responsibilities.' 8. MIND THE GROUP CHAT Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is at the center of an ongoing Pentagon investigation exploring whether his Signal messages, reported earlier this year, contained classified military information 'and if anyone ordered texts to be deleted,' WSJ's Alex Ward and Nancy Youssef report: 'It is unclear whether Acting Pentagon Inspector General Steven Stebbins, who is overseeing the probe, will reach a public conclusion about whether the information was classified' at the time it was shared, but the IG is likely to release his findings ahead of Hegseth's scheduled testimony before the House Armed Services Committee next Thursday. 9. MARK YOUR CALENDARS: U.S. and Chinese trade officials will meet in London on Monday for another round of trade talks amid rising tensions between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, AP's Seung Min Kim reports: 'Speaking to reporters on Air Force One yesterday Trump 'said Xi had agreed to restart exports of rare earth minerals and magnets to the U.S. which China had slowed, threatening a range of U.S. manufacturers that relied on the critical materials. … Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer will represent the U.S. side in the trade talks.' CLICKER — 'The nation's cartoonists on the week in politics,' edited by Matt Wuerker — 16 funnies GREAT WEEKEND READS: — 'A Bizarre PTSD Therapy 'Seemed Too Good to Be True,'' by The Atlantic's Yasmin Tayag: 'What if overcoming trauma can be painless?' — 'The War on Trees,' by Foreign Affairs' Justyna Gudzowska and Laura Ferris: 'How illegal logging funds cartels, terrorists, and rogue regimes.' — 'How Tech Company Recruiters Sidestep Trump's Immigration Crackdown' by ProPublica's Alec MacGillis: 'I had entered one of the most overlooked yet consequential corners of the United States immigration system: the process by which employers sponsor tech workers with temporary H-1B visas as a first step to getting them the green card that entitles them to permanent residency in the U.S.' — 'How measles tore through a remote West Texas city,' by NBC News' Brandy Zadrozny: 'Anti-vaccine activists seized on a deadly outbreak in Seminole, setting off a battle between fringe doctors and mainstream medicine.' — 'Musket vs. AR-15: Judges Are Throwing Out Gun Restrictions Because of Antiquated Laws From America's Founding,' by Chip Brownlee for The Trace: 'A 2022 Supreme Court decision that gun laws should align with the nation's 'history and tradition' has sown confusion in courtrooms and weakened longstanding limits on firearms.' — 'A Professor Was Fired for Her Politics. Is That the Future of Academia?' by Sarah Viren for NYT Mag: 'Maura Finkelstein is one of many scholars discovering that the traditional protections of academic freedom are no longer holding.' TALK OF THE TOWN OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED yesterday morning at the Swiss ambassador's residence in D.C. for a gathering of the intellectual community in which Matt Kaminski moderated a conversation on China, AI and Europe: Sen. Jim Banks (R-Ind.), David Petraeus, Mike Gallagher, Rolf Dobelli, Corinna Hoyer, Ralph Büchi, Anne Neuberger, Julius Genachowski, Paul Nakasone, Heather Podesta, Juleanna Glover, Alan Fleischmann and Dafna Tapiero, Dmitri Alperovitch, Bruce Andrews, Anne Brady Perron, Sheel Tyle, Mark Vlasic, Jonathan Silver, Tomicah Tillemann, Raj Kumar, Ed Luce, Gary Knell, Afsaneh Beschloss, David Bohigian, Doug Rediker and Heidi Crebo-Rediker, Peter Cherukuri, David Feith and Amy Dacey. — SPOTTED last night at Elephant and Castle at Article III Project's 'Bold and Fearless Judges' event hosted by Mike Davis, who did a hit on Fox News in the middle of the event, and Otto Heck: Todd Blanche, David Warrington, Harmeet Dhillon, Andrew Ferguson, Emil Bove, Michael Thielen, Mia Heck, Ryan Giles, Lanny Davis, Gene Hamilton, Gary Lawkowski, Mark Paoletta, Steve Kenny, Gineen Bresso, Bill McGinley, Tom DeMatteo, Stanley Woodward, Patrick Davis, Lee Holmes, Kat Nikas, Aakash Singh, Sam Adkisson, Gates McGavick, Chad Gilmartin, Don McGahn, Terry and Katie Schilling, Bill and Katie Lane, Judge Jennifer Choe-Groves and Ted Groves, Arthur Schwartz, Jessie Jane Duff, Derek and Liz Lyons, Derrick Anderson, Megan Owen, Alida Kass, Graziella Pastor, Stuart McCommas, Brendan Chestnut, Dan Burrows, Kenny Cunningham, Jeff Clark, Lee Holmes, John Bachman, Mike Carter and Alex Swoyer. — SPOTTED at the Picnic Theatre Company's performance of 'Heaven Can Wait' at Tudor Place last night: Steve Rochlin, Christina Sevilla, Sara Cook, Bruce Kieloch, David White, Kimball Stroud, Michael Isikoff, Mary Ann Akers, David Corn, Amy Argetsinger, Indira Lakshmanan, Raquel Krahenbuhl, Riikka Hietajarvi, Nancy Bagley, Soroush Shehabi, Erica Payne, Gene Haigh, Julia Cohen, Neil Barrett, Puru Trivedi, Nova Daly, Kevin Rooney, Antonio Olivo, Amirah Sequeira, Chris Fowler, Alexa Newlin, Jennifer Grinspoon, Daniela McInerne, Dan Burrows and Hugo Verges. TRANSITION — Damian Williams is joining Jenner & Block as partner. He previously was at Paul Weiss and is a former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. More from WaPo HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M) … former VP Mike Pence … Wendy Sherman … Bloomberg's Catherine Lucey … Netflix's Adonna Biel … SKDK's Stephanie Reichin ... Myra Adams … Christina Animashaun … FGS Global's Lars Anderson … Covington & Burling's Dan Erikson … former Reps. Alex Mooney ( and Susan Wild (D-Pa.) … Paul Kelly of the Livingston Group … retired Coast Guard Vice Adm. Brian Peterman … Jerry White … Nathasha Lim Symanski … Chrissy Barry of the House Homeland Security counterterrorism subcommittee … Microsoft's Kaitlin Kirshner Haskins … Jessie D'Angelo … Haley Dorgan … Elizabeth Thorp … Chris Ortman … Javier de Diego … KHQ's Bradley Warren … Dave Abrams THE SHOWS (Full Sunday show listings here): POLITICO 'The Conversation with Dasha Burns': Rahm Emanuel. ABC 'This Week': Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy … House Speaker Mike Johnson. Panel: Chris Christie, Donna Brazile and Reince Priebus Fox News 'Sunday Morning Futures': Interior Secretary Doug Burgum … Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) … Rep. Jason Smith (R-Mo.) … Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.). CNN 'State of the Union': Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) … Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) … Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Okla.). Panel: Bakari Sellers, Xochitl Hinojosa, Kristen Soltis Anderson and Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.). MSNBC 'The Weekend: Primetime': Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.) … New York Assemblymember Zohran Mamdani … South Carolina State Rep. Keishan Scott. NBC 'Meet the Press': Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.) … Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) … Olivia Munn. Panel: Leigh Ann Caldwell, Sara Fagen, Symone Sanders Townsend and Melanie Zanona. CBS 'Face the Nation': Kevin Hassett … Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) … Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-Texa) … Janti Soeripto … Anthony Salvanto. NewsNation 'The Hill Sunday,' guest-anchored by Blake Burman: Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) … Rep. Sarah Elfreth (D-Md.) … Neil Bradley. Panel: Kellie Meyer, Tyler Pager, Jason Willick and John Tamny. FOX 'Fox News Sunday': Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) … Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas). Panel: Mary Katharine Ham, Josh Kraushaar, Marc Thiessen and Juan Williams. CNN 'Inside Politics Sunday': Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.). Panel: Astead Herndon, Olivia Beavers and Jeff Mason. Send Playbookers tips to playbook@ or text us on Signal here. Playbook couldn't happen without our editor Zack Stanton, deputy editor Garrett Ross and Playbook Podcast producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.