Thursday, July 16, 2026

New Rule Could Deny Green Cards



The U.S. Government is Reviving a Rule that could Deny Permanent Residency to Immigrants who use Public Benefits such as Food Stamps and Medicaid, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said on 7/16/2026.

The Administration of Trump (R), Determined to Crack Down on what it Calls Illegal Immigration, says People seeking Green Gards, should Not be "public charges" Who are Primarily Dependent on Government Subsistence.

The Change, announced in an Official Post by the DHS, will take Effect on 9/18/2026r.

The Original Rule, Adopted in 2019 during Trump's First Term in Power, Significantly Expanded the Definition of a Public Charge to include, Anyone who Received a Government Benefit, for more than 12 months in any Three-year period.

This Broad approach was Abandoned in 2022, during the Biden (D) Administration, which Narrowed the Grounds for potentially Denying a Green Card to Immigrants.

In a Ppost on X, the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) said the Revived Rule Underlined the Intent "that aliens in the United States be self-reliant and not dependent on taxpayer-funded government benefits."

The Original Rule was heavily Criticized by Immigrant Advocates, who said it Unfairly Targeted Poor People, and would Bar many People from obtaining Permanent Residency.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Electionline Weekly July-16-2026



Ballot Measures, Legislation & Rulemaking

Federal Legislation: House Republicans unveiled a $95 billion legislative plan focused on boosting defense, aiding farmers and enacting stricter voter registration rules. The 47-page outline, called a budget resolution, is a long-shot undertaking designed to supplement Pentagon funding for the Iran war and address the president’s top priority of changing voter registration requirements. A more ambitious effort was narrowed to address concerns from some conservatives about adding to the deficit. The plan does not seek any offsets to pay for the new spending. House Speaker Mike Johnson pushed ahead after meeting with Trump at the White House this week. “Safeguarding American elections and strengthening our national defense are the most basic responsibilities of Congress,” Johnson said in a statement. Rightwing House Republicans have insisted that their leaders make the bill a priority, and Johnson agreed to a plan to combine the Save America Act with a bill authorizing spending by the state department and related agencies, which the House passed by a 217-209 vote on Wednesday afternoon. The Senate’s top Democrat Chuck Schumer vowed to again block the measure, as his party did when majority leader John Thune earlier this year opened debate on the Save America Act under pressure from Trump and his allies. “I’ll say it as many times as it takes: the [Save America] Act is dead on arrival here in the Senate,” Schumer said ahead of the House vote. “I don’t care how Republicans try to package their plan to resurrect the old ghost of Jim Crow – we will kill it.”

North Carolina Rulemaking: It could become easier for North Carolina elections officials to throw out people’s ballots during the 2026 midterm elections and beyond, if proposed rule changes are approved by the State Board of Elections. The proposed changes, backed by the Republican majority on the State Board of Elections, would affect mail-in voting, and also make it easier for elections officials to reject people’s excuses for not having required voter identification, in addition to also making it easier to kick people out of polling places. The mail-in voting changes would give county elections officials more freedom to throw out people’s ballots over technicalities such as using the wrong kind of envelope, although the officials would have some discretion. As for voter ID, state law allows people to vote without an acceptable photo ID if they claim an exemption such as a religious objection to being photographed, or having their wallet stolen, or other factors. The proposed rules would lower the bar for county elections officials to decide people who submit those forms are lying.

Wisconsin Rulemaking: The Wisconsin Elections Commission voted July 9 to limit voters’ ability to spoil their ballots. This means Wisconsin absentee voters who want to change their vote will no longer be able to do so after it’s been returned. “Once you’ve turned your ballot in, that’s it. That’s my view of it. I don’t have a problem changing out, doesn’t matter why you want it back, you just don’t get it back once you’ve validly returned your ballot to the clerk,” WEC Chair Don Millis said. In the past, voters were allowed to cancel a returned ballot and request a new one if they wanted to change their vote. Others on the WEC believe mailed-in votes and in person votes should have the same playing field. “Just because I put it in the mail doesn’t mean I can’t fix my mistake before, because to me returned is when it goes in the machine to get counted, you can’t undo the count… Why are we treating people that mail it in differently than someone that shows up?” WEC Vice Chair Mark Thomsen said. “Once you quote-unquote cast your ballot by placing it in the mail to return to your municipal clerk, you’ve voted. In order to spoil that ballot you would have had to have an accident or mistake, you know a mistake that needs to be corrected,” Shawano County Clerk Raymond Rigsby said. Rigsby added ballots can only be spoiled if issues occur like marking two candidates, checking an oval instead of shading it in, or the ballot gets wet. But, simply changing your mind about a candidate after the ballot has been returned won’t qualify for a spoiled ballot. “In this case, the vote has occurred and it’s not a mistake, so the spoiling is just, it’s not possible because of a candidate dropping out,” Rigsby said.

Legal Updates

Arizona: U.S. District Judge Michael Liburdi blocked a provision in Arizona’s elections rulebook that prohibits people at polling places from “wearing clothing, uniforms or official-looking apparel intended to deter, intimidate, or harass voters.” Liburdi’s ruling came fewer than two weeks before the Grand Canyon State’s July 21 primary election, with early voting already underway. The elections rulebook, which is revised every two years, was written by Democratic Secretary of State Adrian Fontes and approved by Gov. Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes, also Democrats. The Oversight Project asked the court in May to block multiple provisions of the EPM, arguing that they were unconstitutional. Fontes and Mayes countered that the challenged provisions merely explain existing state law, without expanding upon it. Liburdi handed wins and losses to both parties when he opted to block poll workers from enforcing the intimidating apparel provision, but did not do the same for a provision banning audible electioneering outside the 75-foot perimeter of polling places, if it can be heard at the polling place door. He also chose not to block a provision allowing elections officials to kick political party election observers out of polling places if they raise “repeated frivolous voter challenges to poll workers without any good faith basis.” In his order, the judge noted the conflict in this case between the right to political speech and the government’s authority to maintain order at polling places.

New Jersey: A GOP congressional candidate and state and national Republican committees are seeking to overturn a 2022 law that allows citizen children born abroad to New Jerseyans to vote in the state’s federal elections. In a lawsuit filed in Mercer County Superior Court, the plaintiffs allege the law runs afoul of provisions in New Jersey’s Constitution that require residents live in their state and county for 30 days to be eligible to vote there. Despite the limit in New Jersey’s Constitution, federal law allows some U.S. citizens living overseas to vote in American elections, and those laws take precedence because the U.S. Constitution gives Congress ultimate oversight of federal U.S. Elections. The Uniformed and Overseas Citizens Absentee Voting Act allows Americans living abroad to vote in federal U.S. elections if they would be eligible to do so in the last state they lived in before departing the country. New Jersey law enacted in 2022 appears to go a little further, allowing U.S. citizens born abroad to vote in federal elections if their parent, guardian, spouse, or partner would have last been eligible to vote in New Jersey before departing the country and has not registered to vote elsewhere. In some cases, that law extends suffrage to citizens who have never been to the state. New Jersey officials signaled they would fight the suit.

Nebraska: The Democratic National Committee withdrew a request to intervene in a lawsuit from the Republican National Committee against a Nebraska voting law. Omaha attorney Daniel Gutman, representing the DNC, said that as of July 1, it was unclear whether Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnen and Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers would defend a law that allows certain U.S. citizens who have not lived in Nebraska or the United States, but whose parents are Nebraska residents and voters, to vote in the state. At a July 14 hearing, which lasted just over five minutes before Lancaster County District Judge Ryan Post, Gutman said officials now pledging to mount a defense changed the DNC’s position. Evnen previously described the lawsuit as “a little baffling” in an interview with the Nebraska Examiner. In a July 9 brief, state attorneys said the DNC’s involvement is neither allowed nor needed. The Nebraska Attorney General’s Office said representation is “adequate” if the parties did not collude, if Nebraska is not adverse to the proposed intervenor and if the state “diligently” prosecutes the case. The office said the state and Evnen have met each point and Hilgers has not determined that the law is “facially unconstitutional.”

New Mexico: U.S. District Court Judge Judith Herrera dismissed a lawsuit from the United States Department of Justice seeking detailed New Mexico voter information in a ruling the New Mexico Attorney General and Secretary of State’s Office hailed for preserving the integrity of the state’s elections. The USDOJ filed lawsuits in December against New Mexico and five other states for failing to produce statewide voter registration lists. The lawsuit came after Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver resisted formal requests from federal officials to turn over voter rolls due to concerns about what the data would be used for. The USDOJ sought the state’s full voter list, including Social Security numbers and birth dates. The Secretary of State usually redacts those details for any publicly released list of voters. By the time of the lawsuit, Toulouse Oliver had already given the federal government voter rolls that included years of birth but not Social Security numbers, she told Source NM in December. Herrera ruled that the USDOJ lacked any basis for the lawsuit and failed to adequately argue that the unredacted voter rolls would enable the federal government to evaluate whether New Mexico is complying with federal election law. “Had the DOJ identified as the factual ‘basis’ statistical anomalies within New Mexico’s registration data or conduct associated with the State’s [Voter Registration Logs] maintenance practices, then the outcome may have been different,” Herrera wrote in her ruling.

Oklahoma: An Oklahoma Supreme Court referee heard arguments in a case which could shape the future of the state’s initiative petition process. Supporters of a state question that would let voters decide if the state’s primaries should be open challenged a determination by the Oklahoma Secretary of State that they failed to garner enough legal signatures to get it on the ballot. Frederic Dorwart, an attorney for the state question, which would place all primary candidates on a single ballot, said the Secretary of State must explain why over 57,000 signatures were rejected. Failure to do so imposes an “extraordinary burden” for supporters to be able to challenge the finding, Dorwart said. Secretary of State Benjamin Lepak found that supporters of State Question 836 gathered 142,567 signatures, short of the 172,993 needed to get the proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot. Supporters said they turned in over 200,000 signatures. Lepak, under a new law passed in 2024, determined 57,841 signatures did not match the required number of data points with the state’s voter registration rolls and tossed them out. But the agency could not provide supporters of the state question with the specific reason each signature was deemed invalid. Supreme Court referee Meredith Wolfe will issue a report to the court. Her report is not binding on the court.

Pennsylvania: Matthew Laiss, 32, of Bethlehem who was found guilty of voting more than once in a federal election and voter fraud received his sentence this week according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Charges were brought against Laiss in Sept. 2025 for election fraud during the 2020 election, prosecutors said. He was convicted in March 2026. According to prosecutors, Laiss resided in Ottsville, Pennsylvania, from at least Oct. 2012 to Aug. 2020 and was lawfully registered to vote there. However, Laiss moved to Frostproof, Florida, in or around Aug. 2020, obtained a driver’s license and registered to vote there. In Oct. 2020, the Bucks County Board of Elections mailed Laiss a ballot at his old address, where his parents still lived, prosecutors said. Prosecutors proved at trial that Laiss filled out his Pennsylvania ballot and submitted it in late October. He then went back to Florida and voted at a polling place there on or around Election Day. Laiss claimed he voted twice for President Donald Trump, but that is unverifiable since he cast secret ballots in both Pennsylvania and Florida, according to court documents. Laiss was sentenced to three years probation, with the first six months being home confinement, prosecutors said. He also received a $6,000 fine and $200 special assessment.

West Virginia: Nearly five months after the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) sued West Virginia in an attempt to force the state to turn over unredacted voter ID data, a district court judge has dismissed the case entirely. According to a Facebook post put out Monday night by West Virginia Secretary of State Kris Warner, the case was dismissed on Monday by the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia. The case was filed just weeks after Warner publicly rejected the DOJ’s request to voluntarily provide personal information about West Virginia’s registered voters, citing that such a move is contrary to state law. Warner said that the decision to dismiss “is an important victory for the rule of law, voter privacy, and the dedicated election officials across West Virginia who work every day to ensure the accuracy of our state’s voter registration system.” In the dismissal order, Warner said that the Court found the DOJ’s demands included “no indication that West Virginia is suspected to be noncompliant with the list maintenance requirements of [federal law], nor does it point to any anomalies in West Virginia’s voter registration data.” Despite the victory in court, Warner made it a point to mention that he shares the DOJ’s goal to ensure that only eligible voters cast ballots in West Virginia’s elections.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Crypto Clarity Act



Several Republican Senators are Meeting with Trump (R) at the White House on 7/16/2026, to Discuss the Progress of the Clarity Act, a Major Cryptocurrency Regulation Bill. Sen. Bernie Moreno (R-OH) said the Meeting will Focus on the Bill’s Status and Strategy for getting it Passed, noting that Trump has been closely Involved.

The Biggest Sticking Point in Negotiations, is an Ethics Provision addressing Trump’s Financial Ties to the Cryptocurrency Industry.

Senate Democrats have made this Provision a Key Condition for their Support, which is needed to Pass the Bill.

Lawmakers are aiming to Pass the Legislation before Congress begins its August Recess, after which Midterm Election Politics are Expected to make Major Legislation more Difficult. Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) hopes to bring theBbill to a Vote before 8/7/2026, even if Negotiations with Democrats are Not Fully Resolved.

A Revised Draft of the Bill, has Not yet been Released. Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-WI) said Senators are still Deciding whether to include the Ethics Language now or leave it as a Placeholder, while Negotiations Continue.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Supreme Court Ethics Recusal Transparency Act



The SCERT Act, formally H.R. 3513 in the 119th Congress, was introduced in the House of Representatives on 5/20/2025, by Representative Hank Johnson (D-GA, 4th District) and Referred to the House Judiciary Committee for consideration

The Bill aims to establish a Binding Code of Conduct for Supreme Court justices, create Mechanisms to Investigate alleged Violations, Improve Transparency regarding Conflicts of Interest, and Require justices to explain Recusal Decisions to the Public

As of 7/16/2026, the Bill has Not been Passed by the House or Senate, nor has it been Signed into Law by Trump (R). It remains in the Committee Stage, which is the First Step in the Iegislative Process where the Bill is Reviewed, Debated, and Potentially Amended before being sent to the Full Chamber for a Vote.

The SCERT Act has Garnered Support from Multiple Democratic Lawmakers and is intended to Align Supreme Court Ethics Rules with those Already in Place for Congress, the Executive Branch, Lower Federal Courts, and State Supreme Courts

However, until it Successfully Passes both Chambers of Congress, and is Signed byTrump, it does Not have the Force of Law.

In Summary, while the SCERT Act has been Reintroduced and is Actively under Consideration, it was Not Passed 7/16/2026 and remains Pending in Congress










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Federal Judge Killed Trump Slush Fund



On 7/13/2026, U.S. District Judge Kathleen M. Williams Voided the Judicial Proceedings in a Lawsuit brought by Trump (R) Against the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Ruled the Entire Proceeding Fraudulent, and Referred Multiple Attorneys to their State Bar Associations for Potential Discipline.

Trump had Sued the IRS over a 2019 Tax Return Leak. The Judge found the Lawsuit Amounted to Collusion.

At the Center of Her 56-page Ruling, was the January 6th Slush Fund, a $1.776 Billion Pot of Taxpayer Money, that Critics across both Parties had Condemned as a Political Payoff Dressed-Up as a Legal Settlement.

The Ruling arrived One Day before Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche (R), Trump’s Former Personal Criminal Defense Lawyer, and the Man who Signed the Most Controversial Provisions of the Deal, was Scheduled to Appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee, for His Confirmation Hearing, as the Nation’s Top Law Enforcement Officer. He stated there would be No Fund.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Ukraine is wrecking Russia’s Ships



In another Sign of Ukraine’s Growing Prowess in the Air, on 7/14/2026 said that nearly a Dozen additional Russian Vessels had been Targeted by Ukrainian Drones.

Writing on His Telegram Channel, the Commander of Ukraine’s Drone Forces, Robert Brovdi, perhaps better known by His Call Sign Magyar, gave an Update. “Over the past 9 days, 116 vessels have been intercepted by the SBS 'Birds' in the Sea of Azov, as part of the ongoing operation against Russian vessels." His Latest Update Listed the Vessels that had been Successfully Targeted: 5 Tankers, 5 Dry Cargo Ships, and 1 Ttugboat. “The shadow fleet is dwindling,” He wrote, but added that “it must disappear as a species.”

The Campaign, the Commander explained, is Aimed in part at Exacerbating a Fuel Shortage in Crimea, the Ukrainian Peninsula Annexed by Russian Forces in 2014, and Forcing a Shift in Energy Transportation to Land-Based Routes that are Particularly Vulnerable to Aattack. Ukraine has Stepped-Up its Drone Attacks on Russian Shipping, in particular in and around the Sea of Azov, the Body of Water connected to the Black Sea via the Kerch Strait. Interestingly, Ukraine seems less Intent on Sinking the Ships than on Disabling them, and Attacks appear to have been Focused on Damaging the Russian Ships’ Propulsion Systems, and Loading Equipment to Keep them Out-of-Service

While Russia has some Flexibility in Rerouting Shipments of Goods, including Fuel, Grain, and other Agricultural Products, to other Routes, Overland Options are both Slower and more Expensive than Shipping. But they are also Vulnerable to a Ukrainian Attack. While Cargo Destined for Customers Abroad could be Shipped via Russia’s Ports on the Baltic Sea or Elsewhere on the Black Sea, Ukraine has made it Vividly Clear that Russia Cannot Defend Itself Everywhere All-the-Tme.

Late last week, Russia moved to Sstop Shipping Grain through the Don-Azov Channel, which Connects the Sea of Azov, to Russia’s Don River. Russia, the World’s Largest Grain Exporter, could see up to a Quarter of its Grain Exports Affected by the Temporary Halt to Shipping. Thanks to Recent Ukrainian Attacks on Logistics and Oil Infrastructure in Crimea, Occupation Authorities on the Peninsula announced that they would Limit Power Supplies. Writing on Telegram, Mikhail Razvozhayev, the Head of Russia’s Puppet Government in Sevastopol, One of the Largest Cities in Crimea, said that Two-Four Power Windows would be Followed by Six-Hour Blackouts.

“I understand how difficult this is, which is why we are doing everything possible to stabilize the situation. A team of specialists is currently working to reconfigure the system and deploy all available reserves," ‌Razvozhayev wrote. "Our goal is to reduce the shortfall by this evening and make outages and switching operations less frequent.”

The Announcement by the Kremlin Installed Leader of Russia’s Occupational Government Underscored how Deeply Ukraine’s Campaign against Russian Gas and Oil Infrastructure has been. That Unfolding Campaign has Put Russia’s Refining and Export Capacity in its Crosshairs, Aiming to Hit the Kremlin’s Coffers Hard, and to Drastically Reduce the Funding that Moscow has Used to Prosecute its incredibly Costly War against Ukraine.

The Strikes against Russia’s Energy Infrastructure are Part of what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has Called His Ccountry’s “long-range sanctions” Regime against Russia. As a Part of that Effort, Oil Refineries and Transportation Infrastructure around Russia have found Themselves Vulnerable to Ukrainian Long-Range Strike Drones as well as Kyiv’s Home-Grown Cruise Missiles. The Effects have been Acute.

In recent Weeks, Russian Social Media has been Rife with Images and Videos of Domestic Oil and Gas Infrastructure Billowing Acrid Black Smoke into the Aair. Long Lines for Fuel at Ggas Stations and have to pay in Cash, have also been Widely Reported, in many instances Thousands of Miles from the Front Lines of Ukraine. And while the Still Unfolding Campaign Crimps Russia's Ability to Fund its War against Ukraine, it has also Served to Puncture the Veneer of Insulation from the War that the Russian Public has Largely Enjoyed.

Speaking to Reuters about the Unfolding Situation in the Sea of Azov, One Industry Source did Not Mince their Words. “They [Russian vessels] are standing there like targets before a firing squad. In a couple of days, there won’t be a single intact boat left in the Sea of Azov, only damaged ones.”










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker


Former Putin Ally Will Close Door to Russians



Political Earthquakes take time to Settle. When a Country Changes Direction after nearly Two Decades, the Ripple Effects Touch Everything from Local Schools to Global Military Alliances. Now, One European Nation is trying to Sweep Away the Shadows of its Controversial Past.

Hungary recently experienced a Mmassive Shift in Leadership. After Sixteen years of Uninterrupted Rule, Viktor Orban Lost His Position as Prime Minister in the 4/2026 Elections. Peter Magyar now Leads the Cabinet, and His Team is Eager to change how the world views their country. They want to Prove they are Reliable Partners to the West.

Defense Minister Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi made this Clear during a Recent Public Appearance. He Spoke at the Budapest Energy and Security Talks, an Event hosted by the Equilibrium Institute. The New Defense Chief Stressed that Restoring the Trust of International Allies is a Top Priority. He believes Hungarian Interests now line up perfectly with their Western Partners.

Ruszin-Szendi Noted that the New Government must Recognize the Values of its Allies to Develop a Proper Strategy. Without Trust, He Explained, Good Relations are impossible to Maintain. This Push for Transparency follows Years of Deep concern. Foreign and Local Media Frequently Reported on the Cosy Relationship between Budapest and Moscow, during the Orban years.

Investigative journalists previously Uncovered Conversations between former Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto and Kremlin Officials. Szijjarto Allegedly Discussed European Union Sanctions Directly with Russian Representatives. Looking Ahead, the New Defense Ministry has Aambitious Goals. Ruszin-Szendi Promised that Hungary will Hit the NATO Target of Spending 5% of its Gross Domestic Product on the Military by 2035.

Even so, He Admitted the Current Economy leaves them Juggling Priorities. He Pointed Out that Healthcare and Education remain the Most Urgent needs right now. To Boost Security, the Government Hopes to bring Military Manufacturing Plants directly onto Hungarian Soil. They are currently Talking with Several European Defense Companies to make this happen.










NYC Wins When Everyone Can Vote! Michael H. Drucker