50501 FRIDAY BRIEFING | JULY 3, 2026
This week: digital safety, voting-rights wins, birthright citizenship, ICE arrests, Major Jason Watson’s act of courage, and America’s 250th birthday.
📌 NOTE FOR NEW READERS: This is an independent Substack covering 50501, No Kings, and the broader pro-democracy and civic-action ecosystem.
Tomorrow is the Fourth of July, and the United States turns 250 years old.
The document that started it all said that a government’s power comes from the people, not from a king. (National Archives)
This Week in Review.
Monday:
The Supreme Court protected late-arriving mail ballots 🎉
The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that states can count mail ballots that arrive after Election Day, as long as they’re postmarked by Election Day. The decision in Watson v. Republican National Committee rejected a Trump-backed challenge and kept grace-period rules in place in more than half the states and Washington, D.C. Justice Amy Coney Barrett wrote the opinion, joined by Chief Justice Roberts and the three liberal justices, and Trump called it a “tremendous loss.” Mail voting is how a lot of seniors, disabled voters, military families, rural residents, and working parents cast a ballot at all, so protecting it protects turnout.
The Supreme Court handed the president more firing power
On the same day, the Court ruled 6-3 that Trump could fire FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, and in doing so it overturned a 1935 decision that had let Congress shield the leaders of independent agencies from being fired at will. Those agencies, from the FTC to the labor and product-safety boards, were built to guard the public from fraud and abuse without bending to whoever holds the White House. Giving the president the power to remove their leaders makes it easier to turn watchdogs into loyalists, though the Court did leave the Federal Reserve alone for now.
We published a digital safety guide
Monday’s post we shared a walkthrough for locking down your phone before you head to an action. Hardening your device is a way of protecting the people around you, your friends, family, and fellow organizers, not just yourself. We go over having a long password, turning off face and fingerprint unlock before a protest, trimming app permissions, setting up Signal, and downloading offline maps. Check it out by clicking here.
Tuesday
Birthright citizenship survived 🎉
The Court struck down Trump’s order to end birthright citizenship, ruling 6-3 in Trump v. Barbara that his executive order was unlawful and reaffirming that nearly everyone born on U.S. soil is a citizen. Five justices grounded the decision firmly in the 14th Amendment, the promise written after the Civil War to answer who counts as an American once slavery ended, and a sixth agreed the order was unlawful on narrower grounds, which left the core protection intact. Trump tried to limit that promise to the children of citizens and permanent residents, and the Court said no.
Trump’s crypto fortune raised corruption questions
Trump’s annual financial disclosure, released Tuesday, showed more than $1.4 billion in crypto income for 2025, now his single biggest source of money, even as his administration writes the rules that industry lives under. A president earning that much from a business his own government regulates is not normal or right!
Taxpayer-funded “Freedom Trucks” rewrote American history
Six traveling “Freedom Trucks” fanned out for the 250th with a mobile-museum version of history whose content was created by conservative groups including Hillsdale College and PragerU, where an AI-generated George Washington tells visitors their rights are a “gift from God” beneath a ceiling reading “In God We Trust.” The trucks ran on a $14 million federal grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, paired with $10 million from Freedom 250. The exhibits flatten the American story down to a handful of mostly white founders and skip slavery, Native removal, labor, and civil rights, which is a lot of public money for one narrow, sanitized version of a country this large.
Wednesday
Nearly 450,000 New Yorkers started losing health coverage
Coverage began ending July 1 for nearly 450,000 New Yorkers on the state’s Essential Plan, a casualty of federal Medicaid cuts in last year’s budget law and the expiration of subsidies that made Affordable Care Act plans affordable. The Essential Plan covered people who earn too much for Medicaid but not enough for private insurance.
A judge blocked USPS mail-ballot restrictions
Federal Judge, Emmet Sullivan, blocked the Postal Service from a rule that would have refused to deliver ballots from states that did not provide their voter lists and adopt new balloting procedures. He found it violated a 2021 settlement with the NAACP that requires USPS to prioritize timely delivery of election mail through 2028. It was the second court loss in two weeks for Trump’s push to squeeze mail voting, and another reminder that lawsuits and civil-rights groups are still holding the line.
Major Jason Watson chose the Constitution over his career
Active-duty Air Force Major Jason Watson stood on the Capitol steps in uniform, held a sign reading “Impeach Convict Remove,” and called for the impeachment, conviction, and removal of Trump and Vice President JD Vance. He is believed to be the first active-duty commissioned officer to do so publicly, and he knew what this would cost him: military rules sharply limit political activity in uniform, and the Air Force has opened an investigation that could end a career of more than twenty years. (Major Jason Watson has been in the military for 17 years.) He said that he was willing to pay the price, and for a lot of us in this movement, it’s a brave and courageous service. Rep. Al Green, who walked him to the steps, praised him afterward in a video as showing “the kind of courage necessary to inspire others,” and we are proud of him too.
Over $125,000 has already been raised for Major Jason Watson!
We have added his Spot-Fund link to our Linktree:

We shared a Fourth of July reflection
The Fourth has always been an activist holiday. It traces 250 years of disobedience, from abolitionists and suffragists to labor organizers, farmworkers, disability-rights occupiers, and today’s No Kings crowds, who kept forcing the country to live up to what it wrote down. Check it out by clicking here.
Thursday
ICE arrested 10,000 people in five days
ICE arrested about 10,000 people over five days at the end of June, roughly 2,000 a day, a sharp jump reported by the Associated Press as the agency traded city raids for steadier enforcement. Behind that number are parents pulled from workplaces, kids waiting on a pickup that will not come, and whole neighborhoods wondering who’s next.
A court drew a line on indefinite detention
The 5th Circuit ruled 2-1 that the government can’t hold immigrants longer than 90 days without a bond hearing, the chance to ask a judge for release. The case was brought by three fathers of U.S.-citizen children, each in the country more than a decade with no criminal record, detained after Texas traffic stops. The ruling could reach thousands held in Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
Friday
Did Trump hijacked America’s 250th birthday?
Democrats on the House Natural Resources Committee, led by Rep. Jared Huffman, released a report titled “From Vanity to Insanity,” accusing Trump’s allies of turning the nation’s birthday into what they call a “hotbed of corruption and self-enrichment.”
Freedom 250 denies it, calling the report “categorically false” and a “partisan smear,” and that denial belongs right here at the top.
Congress created America250 in 2016 as a bipartisan commission so the birthday would belong to everyone. The report says that when that commission would not bend to Trump, the White House stood up a rival group, Freedom 250, and tucked it inside the National Park Foundation, a public charity, so it could raise money outside the transparency rules Congress wrote.
Then it declared Freedom 250 the main event. Congress set aside $150 million for the 250th, America250 expected $100 million of it and has received only $25 million, while Freedom 250 grew.
The sharpest allegation is a bait-and-switch that could amount to wire fraud, donors who meant to give to the bipartisan commission were allegedly handed Freedom 250’s bank details instead, so their money flowed to Trump’s group.
The report also describes selling access to the president through sponsorship packages that end in a photo op, soliciting foreign money (the report says its CEO, Keith Krach, pitched foreign leaders at Davos), and steering contracts to Trump allies, including the firm that helped stage the rally before the January 6 attack.
In the clip below, Rep. Huffman walks through what happened, arguing that Freedom 250 has been harvesting personal data from Americans who sign up for “free” events, and that park rangers were ordered to strip factual signs about slavery and Native removal. Freedom 250 says no funds were diverted, that sponsors knew who they were paying, and that it takes no foreign donations.
However, a birthday meant for all of us was run through a private company with the details hidden from public view.
Trump heads to Mount Rushmore
Today Trump travels to Mount Rushmore for a Freedom 250 keynote and fireworks, the first fireworks there in six years, ahead of Saturday’s big event on the National Mall. In the past he mused openly about adding his own face to the mountain, which tells you most of what you need to know… the 250th keeps getting pointed back at Trump to fuel his ego.
The Good News 🎉
Birthright citizenship survived, mail voting won twice, once at the Supreme Court and again when a judge blocked the USPS rule. Detained immigrants won a due-process line. And Major Jason Watson reminded everyone to put the Constitution ahead of comfort.
Mark your calendar:
Good Trouble Lives On, a weekend of action from July 17 to 19 honoring John Lewis, built around teach-ins, voter engagement, and community events nationwide. (goodtroubleliveson.org)
What to Pay Attention to
Watch Freedom 250. The money, the secret donors, the federal funds, the personal data, and whether Congress ever holds a real hearing. Huffman says his investigation continues past the Fourth and could bring subpoenas or criminal referrals if Democrats retake the House.
Watch ICE. The arrest numbers are climbing fast, and quieter tactics don’t necessarily mean less harm.
Watch voting rights. This week brought wins, but the broader push to make voting harder is not over especially with how much Trump keeps pushing for the SAVE act.
Watch July 17 to 19. Good Trouble Lives On!
The 250th belongs to the people, not MAGA, not to Trump.
If you’re protesting tomorrow, share your protest signs in the comments so we can all see them:
And shoutout to Todd, who keeps morale high in our 50501 Facebook group with his daily protest dance videos. He’s out there every day waving signs. Thank you, Todd!







They are anti freedom trucks which use hardworking taxpayers money
Project 2025 is alive and well. Everyone should read it. Upon Trump's return to the White House as president, he immediately began implementing the destructive goals of the authors. Abetted by the Supreme Court, America is crumbling into authoritarian control. We may not have a crowned king, but we do have a tyrannical Trump turning our country upside down. It is a tragedy of tremendous proportions watching the futures of over three hundred million people being destroyed by the wanton cruelty of a few unscrupulous miscreants. Can we replace them soon enough? We'll know in November.