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    Hawaii observatory to be evicted amid federal cuts as volcano shoots 700ft lava

    As Hawaii’s most active volcano shot out fountains of lava on Thursday, some of them reaching as high as 700ft, scientists from the US Geological Survey have been posting regular updates on the scale and pace of the eruptions.But those same scientists, along with their volcano-monitoring equipment, may soon be evicted from their office because of Elon Musk’s federal government cost-cutting, the Honolulu Civil Beat reported.The Geological Survey office in Hilo, Hawaii, has appeared on an internal list of federal offices whose leases are due to be cancelled on 30 September, as part of an effort by Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” to terminate leases for hundreds of federal offices this year, the Associated Press reported.View image in fullscreen“It remains unclear exactly how that lease cancellation will affect the observatory’s research and public services,” the Honolulu Civil Beat reported.The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory did not immediately respond to requests for comment.A spokesperson for the US Geological Survey said in a statement that the process of “streamlining government operations” was “ongoing, and we will provide updates as more information becomes available”.“We are actively working with General Services Administration to ensure that every facility and asset is utilized effectively, and where necessary, identifying alternative solutions that strengthen our mission,” the spokesperson said.For the past hundred years, the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory has been tasked with monitoring the islands’ geologic activity, for the purposes of both scientific research and public safety warnings. Today, according to the observatory’s website, a team of more than 30 people monitors data collected 24 hours a day in order to provide local residents updates on what’s currently happening, and what might be coming next.View image in fullscreenAs Kilauea began continuously releasing lava from its summit caldera inside Hawaii Volcanoes national park on Wednesday morning after a weeklong pause, the observatory’s scientists posted frequent updates, noting health hazards and that the molten rock was contained within the park and wasn’t threatening residential areas.The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory is one of five volcano observatories run by the US Geological Survey across the western US. The American Institute of Physicists, a non-profit that advocates for science and scientists, posted on its website that “one of the sites of the Alaska Volcano Observatory, which houses equipment to monitor possible eruptions”, was also slated for possible closure.The Associated Press contributed reporting More

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    What is the US Department of Education and what does it do?

    Donald Trump has taken the overwhelming step of undoing the Department of Education on Thursday by signing an executive order to dismantle the agency in charge of the country’s national education policy.With the stroke of a pen, Trump fulfills a campaign promise he made all the way back in 2016.What is the Department of Education?The Department of Education is a cabinet-level agency created by Jimmy Carter in 1979 to oversee national education policy and administer federal assistance programs for schools across the country.The department manages a budget of approximately $268bn and employs about 4,400 staff members. Its core responsibilities have included distributing federal financial aid for education, collecting data on the US’s schools, identifying major educational issues and enforcing federal education laws prohibiting discrimination and implementing congressional education legislation.Among its most significant functions is administering federal student aid programs, providing billions in grants, work-study funds and loans to more than 13 million students. The agency also oversees programs addressing special education, English-language acquisition and education for disadvantaged students.Critics have long questioned the need for the department, arguing education should remain entirely under state and local control, while its supporters maintain it plays a crucial role in protecting educational equity and providing much-needed federal backing to schools serving vulnerable populations.Can Trump legally eliminate a government agency?Scrapping an entire department would require congressional approval – something that conservatives seeking to get rid of the education department have failed to do for decades.No president has ever successfully closed a cabinet-level agency enshrined in law before. And the constitutional separation of powers means the president’s executive authority alone isn’t sufficient to close the agency by the stroke of his pen.The White House has acknowledged this limitation, with administration officials confirming they don’t have the necessary votes in Congress to eliminate the department completely.So instead, Trump’s executive order would essentially direct the education secretary, Linda McMahon, to “take all necessary steps to facilitate the closure”, according to administration officials, while working within existing executive branch powers. This could include reorganizing certain functions, appointing leadership aligned with the aggressive drawing-down goal and potentially returning specific authorities to states where federal law permits.What does the executive order mean for American students?The mass weakening of the agency will undoubtedly create significant uncertainty for America’s 50 million public school students and their families, with impacts varying widely depending on how the directive is implemented.In the immediate term, most students will probably see little change to their daily educational experience, as schools primarily operate under state and local control and budgets for the year are already set. However, the long-term implications could be substantial if federal education programs are modified or reduced.Shuttering the department puts marginalized students most at risk, experts say. Since federal programs support special education, English-language learners and disadvantaged students, they face the brunt of the impact. The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (Idea), which provides protections for students with disabilities, is federally enforced through the department.What happens to student loans?There is significant uncertainty for the federal student loan system, which currently manages approximately $1.69tn in outstanding debt for more than 43 million Americans.While the White House has indicated functions such as student loans will continue, any disruption to the department’s distribution of grants, work-study funds and loans could affect the more than 19 million college students in the United States.There are questions about which department might oversee these operations, but earlier this month, Trump suggested transferring loan management to either the treasury department, commerce department or the small business administration next. The treasury department may be the most likely choice.Borrowers currently in repayment are unlikely to see immediate changes to their payment requirements or loan terms, but may face uncertainty about where to direct questions and how to navigate repayment options if administrative responsibilities shift. But the executive order’s impact on new student loans and financial aid processing for incoming college students remains unclear. More

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    Judge blocks Elon Musk’s Doge from accessing social security records

    A federal judge on Thursday blocked Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) from accessing social security records as part of its hunt under Donald Trump for fraud and waste, calling the effort a “fishing expedition”.Judge Ellen Hollander granted a temporary restraining order that prevents Social Security Administration (SSA) workers from allowing Doge to have access to records that contain personally identifiable information.Musk, the world’s richest man and a huge political backer of Trump, has been tasked by the US president with slashing costs and employees at the federal government: a mission that has caused chaos and disruption across the US amid mass firings and huge numbers of government projects and contracts being canceled.The Trump administration says Doge has a 10-person team of federal employees at the SSA, seven of whom have been granted read-only access to agency systems or personally identifiable information.The lawsuit challenging Doge’s access to sensitive records was brought in February by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, the Alliance for Retired Americans and the American Federation of Teachers.Attorneys for the government argued the Doge access did not deviate significantly from normal practices inside the agency, where employees are routinely allowed to search its databases. But attorneys for the plaintiffs called the access unprecedented.In her ruling Hollander also instructed Doge to “disgorge and delete” any non-anonymized data it has obtained from the SSA since Trump took office, and said the agency cannot install or access any software in social security systems.Social security payments are a lifeline for millions of elderly Americans across the country and any effort to cut back the system is widely seen as a political minefield. However, Musk has claimed the system – without providing much convincing evidence – is rife with fraud. More

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    US seeks to deport Indian academic over political views and Palestinian wife, lawyers say

    An Indian academic at Georgetown University, whose lawyers say was arrested as punishment for his wife’s Palestinian heritage and opposition to Israel’s war in Gaza, has filed an emergency court request to prevent deportation.Department of Homeland Security agents on Monday detained Badar Khan Suri, a postdoctoral fellow at the university’s Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, saying that his visa was revoked. Suri’s attorney said that he was arrested on the same spurious legal grounds as Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil, according to Politico.Suri was arrested after returning home from a traditional Ramadan meal and detained by masked federal agents, his legal team said. He has since been transported to several immigration detention facilities and is now at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement “staging center” in Louisiana “potentially awaiting deportation”, the ACLU of Virginia said. His attorneys are requesting his immediate return to Virginia and release while his immigration case is being considered.Detainees may only be held at this particular facility for 72 hours, his lawyers contend. “The facility also does not permit access to visitors or even legal counsel,” court papers in support of the emergency petition say.“Ripping someone from their home and family, stripping them of their immigration status, and detaining them solely based on political viewpoint is a clear attempt by President Trump to silence dissent,” Sophia Gregg, a senior immigrants’ rights attorney at the ACLU of Virginia, said in a statement. “That is patently unconstitutional.”Suri on Tuesday filed a legal petition for release; in court papers first reported by Politico, his attorney said that he did not have a criminal record, nor had he been charged with any crime.The Department of Homeland Security alleged that Suri had ties to the Palestinian militant group Hamas and claimed he shared its propaganda and antisemitic content on social media, officials said in a statement to Fox News. This statement, which did not include any evidence, said that the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, found that his activities “rendered him deportable”.One of Suri’s attorneys, Hassan Ahmad, said he had not been able to reach him since the arrest outside his Arlington, Virginia, home. “We’re trying to speak with him. That hasn’t happened yet,” Ahmad told Politico. “This is just another example of our government abducting people the same way they abducted Khalil.”Suri, who was teaching a course this spring on “majoritarianism and minority rights in south Asia”, holds a doctorate in peace and conflict studies from a university in India, according to Reuters. His wife, Mapheze Saleh, a US citizen, is the daughter of Ahmed Yousef, a former political adviser to Hamas.For at least one month before Suri’s arrest, various hardline pro-Israel social media accounts, as well as Israel’s US embassy, highlighted his wife and father-in-law in posts on X. One 13 March missive, which showed a photo purporting to be Saleh and another photo of her and her father, tagged the US attorney general, Pam Bondi. Court papers say that such groups publicized the home address of the couple, who have three children.“Dr Suri’s experience is shocking and disgraceful,” Ahmad said in a a statement. “It should worry everyone that masked government agents can disappear someone from their home and family because the current administration dislikes their opinion.”According to a 2018 article about Suri and Saleh in the Hindustan Times, Saleh is the daughter of Ahmed Yousef, a former political adviser to Hamas.Suri’s arrest came amid Donald Trump’s efforts to expel foreign nationals who participated in pro-Palestinian demonstrations against Israel’s war in Gaza following the October 2023 Hamas attack. Civil liberties groups have decried Trump’s actions as assaults on free speech and illegal targeting of political opponents.View image in fullscreenKhalil, a Palestinian Columbia graduate and green card holder, faces deportation under a provision of immigration law that permits the US secretary of state to expel non-citizens if their presence in the country is deemed a threat to foreign policy. A Manhattan federal court judge ordered that Khalil remain in the US while his immigration case is pending and has transferred the proceedings to New Jersey.Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, confirmed in a social media post that Rubio deemed Suri’s presence a threat to US foreign policy interests.“Suri was a foreign exchange student at Georgetown University actively spreading Hamas propaganda and promoting antisemitism on social media. Suri has close connections to a known or suspected terrorist, who is a senior advisor to Hamas,” McLaughlin said in a post on X. “The Secretary of State issued a determination on March 15, 2025 that Suri’s activities and presence in the United States rendered him deportable under INA section 237(a)(4)(C)(i).”A spokesperson for Georgetown said the university did not know of any alleged wrongdoing on Suri’s part and that it supported students’ and professors’ right to free expression. “Dr Khan Suri is an Indian national who was duly granted a visa to enter the United States to continue his doctoral research on peacebuilding in Iraq and Afghanistan. We are not aware of him engaging in any illegal activity, and we have not received a reason for his detention,” the university said. “We support our community members’ rights to free and open inquiry, deliberation and debate, even if the underlying ideas may be difficult, controversial or objectionable. We expect the legal system to adjudicate this case fairly.”Trump has repeatedly characterized pro-Palestinian protesters as antisemitic. Those advocating for Palestine, among them some Jewish groups, contend that their criticism of Israel’s military efforts in Gaza and support for Palestinian rights has wrongly been cast as antisemitism by critics.Reuters contributed reporting More

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    Los Angeles’s projected $1bn budget shortfall will lead to layoffs, officials say

    Battered by the aftermath of historic wildfires and worsening economic conditions, the city of Los Angeles is projecting that it will face an estimated $1bn shortfall in its budget next year, which is likely to result in major cuts to city services.Next year’s nearly $1bn budget gap “makes layoffs nearly inevitable”, city administrative officer Matt Szabo told the city council on Wednesday. “We are not looking at dozens or even hundreds of layoffs, but thousands.”In a statement on Wednesday, the Los Angeles mayor, Karen Bass, said that she was preparing a budget for next year that would “deliver fundamental change in the way the City operates”.In her “reform budget”, Bass wrote in a public letter addressed to Szabo: “We must consider no program or department too precious to consider for reductions or reorganization.”The Trump administration’s trade and immigration policies are likely to make Los Angeles’s already bad economic situation even worse in the coming year, Szabo told city officials in Wednesday’s meeting.Inflation and a weakening economy, combined with the disruption and damage of January’s wildfires, have already driven an estimated $141m reduction in revenue from the city’s business tax, sales tax and hotel tax through the end of February, Szabo said.“Federal trade policy is not only likely to spur further inflation, but also to slow growth and dampen international travel, upon which our hotel tax relies,” he added.Donald Trump’s pledges of enacting mass deportations of undocumented people across the country could also have a damaging effect on Los Angeles, and affect the local economy.“Federal immigration policy provides a particular threat to our local economy,” Szabo said. “The construction industry in the state of California is estimated to be about 40% undocumented, and, due to the fires, there is nowhere in the country where demand for construction and construction-related services will be higher than here in Los Angeles.”The city is also struggling with a dramatic increase in lawsuit liabilities over the past three years, with payouts in the past year likely totaling $320m.Szabo said that working with state lawmakers in Sacramento to cap payouts in lawsuits against the city is one strategy to address the city’s ballooning liabilities. He also said that making Los Angeles homeowners pay more for solid waste collection, which he said the city’s general fund is currently subsidizing, could close $200m of the gap in next year’s budget.The extent of the city’s financial problems took some local officials by surprise, the Los Angeles Times reported, quoting councilmember Bob Blumenfield as saying: “There’s no question that all of us are in shock with this number.” More

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    Trump signs executive order to dismantle US Department of Education

    Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday that instructs the US education secretary, Linda McMahon, to start dismantling the Department of Education, seemingly attempting to circumvent the need to obtain congressional approval to formally close a federal department.The administration may eventually pursue an effort to get Congress to shut down the agency, Trump said at a signing ceremony at the White House on Thursday, because its budget had more than doubled in size in recent years but national test scores had not improved.The federal government does not mandate curriculum in schools; that has been the responsibility of state and local governments, which provide 90% of the funding to schools. Nevertheless, at the White House, Trump repeated his campaign promise to “send education back to the states”.The executive order targeting the education department, which has been expected for weeks, directed McMahon to take all necessary steps to shut down key functionalities. Trump added at the signing ceremony that he hoped McMahon would be the last education secretary.“My administration will take all lawful steps to shut down the department. We’re going to shut it down and shut it down as quickly as possible. It’s doing us no good,” Trump said.McMahon appeared to smile in acknowledgment as she sat in the front row at the signing event in the East Room. Trump spoke from a stage in front of a row of state flags, and flanked on each side by a group of schoolchildren sitting at small desks.The bulk of the education department’s budget is made up of federal grant and loan programs, including the $18.4bn Title I program that provides funding to high-poverty K-12 schools and the $15.5bn Idea program that helps cover the education costs for students with disabilities.The White House said those programs, as well as the $1.6tn federal student loan program, would not be affected by the order. It was not immediately clear what spending cuts the administration would be able to achieve without cutting those initiatives.The move comes after the administration has already taken steps to undercut the department’s authority by instituting a round of layoffs that has reduced its workforce by nearly half and cancelled dozens of grants and contracts.The idea of shutting down the education department dates back to efforts by Republicans in the 1980s. But the push has become increasingly mainstream in recent years as pro-Trump grassroots activists took aim at agendas that promoted education standards and more inclusive policies.Representative Thomas Massie, a Republican from Kentucky, has separately introduced a one-sentence bill on Friday that would terminate the education department at the end of 2026. Similar efforts have failed to get enough votes to pass in previous years.The Trump administration’s efforts to shutter the education department have largely followed the playbook in Project 2025, the Heritage Foundation’s rightwing manifesto to remake the federal government, which envisions the department as a “statistics-gathering agency that disseminates information to the states”.Democrats on Capitol Hill denounced the executive order and warned it could leave in jeopardy millions of low-income families, who rely on federal funding in schools.“Shutting down the Department of Education will harm millions of children in our nation’s public schools, their families and hardworking teachers. Class sizes will soar, educators will be fired, special education programs will be cut and college will get even more expensive,” Hakeem Jeffries, the US House minority leader, said in a statement.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionThe progressive wing of the House Democratic caucus also denounced Trump’s order as an unconstitutional attempt to evade seeking congressional approval to implement his political agenda.“The reality is that the Trump administration does not have the constitutional power to eliminate the Department of Education without the approval of Congress – however, what they will do is defund and destabilize the agency to manufacture chaos and push their extremist agenda,” said the Democratic congressman Maxwell Frost.But without cutting out the department itself, the incoming Trump administration, buoyed by a rightwing backlash to public schools that intensified after the Covid-19 pandemic, could alter key parts of the department’s budget and policies in ways that would be felt in schools nationwide.Some Republicans support the idea of sending block grants to states that aren’t earmarked for specific programs, letting states decide whether to fund low-income students or students with disabilities instead of requiring them to fund the programs for those students. Programs that don’t affect students directly, such as those that go toward teacher training, could also be on the chopping block. Expanding the use and promotion of school vouchers and installing “parents’ rights” policies are also likely.In late January, Trump signed executive orders to promote school choice, or the use of public dollars for private education, and to remove funding from schools accused of “radical indoctrination”. Trump also revived a “1776 commission” to “promote patriotic education”.The education department boasted that in the first week of the Trump administration it had “dismantled” diversity, equity and inclusion programs.Soon after Trump took over, the department was loaded with key staffers tied to a rightwing thinktank, the America First Policy Institute, often referred to as a “White House in waiting”. The thinktank has supported driving out diversity programs and banning books, which the Global Project Against Hate and Extremism documented in a report on the institute’s ties to the education department. The policy institute has promoted installing Christianity in government, including in schools.The department ended investigations into book banning and got rid of a book-ban coordinator position last month in a move announced by Craig Trainor, the acting assistant secretary for civil rights, who previously held a role at the thinktank. More

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    Friday essay: Trump’s presidency is being compared to America’s Gilded Age – what was it, and what happened next?

    “Trump’s golden age looks an awful lot like a new Gilded Age,” wrote Politico this month, reflecting on the second inauguration of the United States’ president, prominently attended by tech billionaires. The day after that inauguration, historian Beverly Gage “couldn’t stop thinking about the Gilded Age” and its “rapid technological change as well as stark inequality, corporate graft and violent clashes between workers and bosses”.

    But what was the Gilded Age – and does the comparison hold up?

    The term, which spans the 1870s–1890s, came from an 1873 novel by celebrated satirist Mark Twain, The Gilded Age: A Tale of To-Day, co-written with journalist and neighbour Charles Dudley Warner. It meant a nation that glittered from its growth and the accumulation of economic power by the extremely wealthy. The title referenced Shakespeare’s King John, in which the Earl of Salisbury states, “To gild refined gold, to paint the lily […] is wasteful and ridiculous excess” (Act IV, scene 2).

    Trump himself has cited this era as an aspiration. “We were at our richest from 1870 to 1913. That’s when we were a tariff country. And then they went to an income tax concept,” Trump said, days after taking office. “It’s fine. It’s OK. But it would have been very much better.”

    Experts on the era, however, say he is idealising “a time rife with government and business corruption, social turmoil and inequality”, and “dramatically overestimating” the role of tariffs.

    “The most astonishing thing for historians is that nobody in the Gilded Age economy – except for the very rich – wanted to live in the Gilded Age economy,” said Richard White, emeritus professor of history at Stanford University.

    Elon Musk arrives before the 2025 presidential inauguration in the Rotunda of the US Capitol in Washington.
    AAP

    What is ‘the Gilded Age’?

    For Twain and his co-writer, the message of their novel was plain: the early 1870s was full of gilded lilies – a period of wasteful excess, shady dealing in business, and political corruption.

    The year 1872 saw a massive scandal over the railroads’ influence in politics, after “a sham construction company”, Crédit Mobilier, had been chartered to build the Union Pacific Railroad “by financing it with unmarketable bonds”.

    Representative Oakes Ames of Massachusetts sold the shares at bargain rates to high-ranking House colleagues to secure political clout for the company. While most sold them quickly, representative James Brooks of New York (also a government director for Union Pacific Railroad) profited from a large block of shares.

    Ames and Brooks were censured by the House in 1873 for using their political position for financial gain. The Crédit Mobilier Scandal, as it was called, became nationwide news.

    A political cartoon depicts Uncle Sam directing Congressmen implicated in the scandal to ritually suicide.
    Joseph Keppler, Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper/Wikimedia Commons

    The Gilded Age satirised such blatant pursuit of wealth. Its story centred around the members of the fictional Hawkins family, trying to get rich by selling their essentially worthless land in Tennessee under false pretences that misrepresented its value. The novel employs pathos as well as satire. An adopted daughter, Laura Hawkins, kills her married lover. She is tried and acquitted, but before her death, she feels guilty about her past behaviour.

    Though amusing and clever as political and social satire, critics at the time were unimpressed by its rambling plot and uneven narrative – and it has never been regarded as great literature.

    The Gilded Age, as an era, was a time of great economic booms and busts. It saw the accumulation of millions by the savvy and the rise of systemic corruption in the halls of Congress, state and local legislatures. Tammany Hall, the Democratic headquarters in New York, became almost a synonym for urban corruption in the awarding of municipal contracts.

    Politics was trench warfare between the closely matched Democrats and Republicans. The themes of political battle included the supposed evils of the banking and credit system, how to remember the meaning of the recently ended American Civil War (the Democratic Party was still accused of being “the party of rebellion” in 1890), and how to incorporate formerly enslaved people into the body politic without giving them significant power. These are enduring issues.

    The Gilded Age, as we think of it today, probably wasn’t set in concrete as an era covering the whole of the late 19th century until 1927, when Charles Austin Beard, then America’s most famous historian, plucked the term from Twain’s 1873 book for a chapter in his hugely influential textbook, The Rise of American Civilization, co-written with his wife, Mary Ritter Beard.

    The Beards used the term to cover the period from approximately the late 1860s to the mid-1890s in domestic American history. The Civil War and Reconstruction period (1865–77) and the Gilded Age overlapped: corruption had already been present during the war, due to government contracts for the materials of war. Their book was assigned to several generations of mid-20th-century university and high school students in the US, and the term entered common usage.

    Waves of progressive advance and reaction

    Beard was an advocate of civil liberties and a sharp critic of the rich and politically powerful. He excoriated the plutocracy of the Gilded Age and their kitsch imitations of the European aristocracy’s tastes and possessions. But he quietly rejoiced in the underlying growth of a mass of people who loomed as a separate base for later progressivism in politics. His idea of periods of democratic and progressive advance on the one hand, and reaction on the other, has endured.

    The extremes of the Gilded Age prompted a wave of progressive reform in the US between the 1890s and 1920. In 1890, came the first federal act that outlawed monopolistic business practices, enforced through the court system by Theodore Roosevelt, beginning in 1902.

    Laws were introduced for protection of workers (mostly at the state level and through the courts), for direct election of senators, and for women’s suffrage. New laws also increased the regulation of industry, with measures like the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Federal Meat Inspection Act (both in 1906), and increased certain trade union rights, highlighted in Roosevelt’s intervention in the Anthracite Coal Mining Strike of 1902.

    The extremes of the Gilded Age prompted a wave of progressive reform in the US, including presidential intervention in the 1902 Anthracite Coal Mining Strike.
    The Strike in the Coal Mines, Harper’s Weekly/Wikimedia Commons

    History doesn’t repeat; it may rhyme

    Journalists, politicians and historians are talking about today’s “Gilded Age” as a repetition of the excessive wealth and power of the 1870s. However, Twain is sometimes quoted saying: “History does not repeat itself, but it often rhymes.”

    No written record exists to show Twain ever used these exact words, but we can find the sentiment expressed in The Gilded Age, which seems to be where this gem originated. Twain and Warner actually wrote:

    History never repeats itself, but the Kaleidoscopic combinations of the pictured present often seem to be constructed out of the broken fragments of antique legends.

    The original Gilded Age was a rising, yet flawed empire of the wealthy. Today’s second Gilded Age is a story of a plutocratic challenge for power in a democratic republic stuck in long-term anxieties over its potential decline – led by a showman helming a wild, unpredictable ride.

    Another similarity between then and now is the attempt to legislate morality in the image of often ill-informed – but prone-to-vote – rural and small-town minorities. In the 1880s, one finely balanced moral struggle was over whether the US should have statewide alcohol prohibition. In some ways, this parallels debates over state anti-abortion legislation today.

    The 1880s moral struggle over prohibition in some ways parallels debates over state anti-abortion legislation today.
    Adam Davis/AAP

    There are more superficial similarities, too.

    Donald Trump is one of only two presidents to serve two nonconsecutive terms. The other was Democrat Grover Cleveland, in the Gilded Age. But the differences between Trump and Cleveland also strike me.

    Cleveland was well connected with the business community, but he was not a convicted felon. The worst he did was this: he had fathered an illegitimate child, and his indiscretion became the stuff of humorous campaign literature in 1884’s presidential contest. “Ma Ma, where’s My Pa?” chanted Republicans seeking to undermine his moral integrity within Victorian-era morality.

    After Cleveland won, Democrats replied: “Gone to the White House, Ha, Ha, Ha.” Trivial campaigning issues are as old, almost, as the American republic itself.

    Gilded Age president Grover Cleveland and Donald Trump have been the only two US presidents to serve two nonconsecutive terms.
    Library of Congress, Pool/AAP

    The 1880s, the time of Grover and his reputedly crooked Republican alternative, James G. Blaine, saw morally suspect candidates rise to the surface. Democrats labelled Blaine “the continental liar from the state of Maine”, for using his influence to obtain favours from railroad companies. That pattern of extreme and often frivolous partisanship has been renewed since the Obama presidency.

    American presidential politics – then as now – is gladiatorial sport, signifying little in the long-term history of the US except the recurrent failure of the nation to become more fully democratic, let alone a republic of equals. In the 1880s and 1890s, legalised racism was on the rise, most African Americans were losing the right to vote, and the women’s suffrage issue was only starting to be influential, later than in Australasia.

    Like today, the Gilded Age was an era of a global communications revolution. Railways spread across North America, increasing from 35,000 miles of track in 1865 to 254,000 miles in 1916. A roll-out of submarine telegraph cables connecting the US to the world was also well underway. This pattern parallels our own communications revolution, with social media and now AI continuing to eclipse traditional media and in-person interaction.

    A ceremony for the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad.
    Yale Collection of Western Americana, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library/Wikimedia Commons

    In the Gilded Age, the economic greatness of America was laid out. It was pushed forward by rich entrepreneurs, otherwise known as robber barons: such as John D. Rockefeller in oil, Andrew Carnegie in steel, and George Westinghouse in electrical power and railroad brakes.

    Today’s entrepreneurs are epitomised by the tech billionaires so prominent at Trump’s inauguration, including Meta co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Amazon owner Jeff Bezos, whose other enterprises include space company Blue Origin.

    Chief among them is Elon Musk, owner of social media company X, SpaceX, and electric car company Tesla. Musk, who helped fund and organise Trump’s election campaign, has received “at least US$38 billion in government contracts, loans, subsidies and tax credits, often at critical moments”, according to the Washington Post.

    There is currently a backlash against electric vehicle company Tesla, owned by Elon Musk, who helped fund and organise Trump’s campaign.
    Tolga Akmen/AAP

    Musk represents an escalation in the influence of the rich and powerful. He has an office in the White House, from which he runs the department of government efficiency (DOGE) and is regularly seen in the Oval Office itself. (However, a federal judge ruled this week that the Musk-led DOGE’s shutdown of USAID likely violated the US constitution, and ordered the administration to reverse some of the actions taken to dismantle the agency.)

    Mark Twain would have felt at home – and yet not impressed – had he lived today.

    Changing empires

    Where the landscape looks most different today is our geopolitical context. The US in the Gilded Age was an up-and-coming force, but was not yet the dominant world power.

    From 1865 to 1873, its industrial production would increase by 75%, putting the US ahead of every other nation save Britain in manufacturing output. Its economic advance, achieved under a security blanket of protectionism, created an enormous internal market for capitalist growth. Economists and economic historians differ on how influential the tariffs were, as they still do today.

    Again, this sounds familiar, but the tariffs of the 19th century were mainly introduced as part of internal political machinations, seeking to bind voters to one party or the other. For Trump they are, more significantly, bargaining chips in a geopolitical contest.

    Economists and economic historians differ on how influential the tariffs were, as they still do today.
    Justin Lane/AAP

    China, the world’s second biggest economy, is the true enemy in this regard. In the 1890s, China was the site of the dying Qing Empire, with Britain the dominant world force.

    In the 1890s, reporters from the world’s newspapers did not hang on every unnuanced word from a US president. Today is very different. The US president is the controversial leader of the “free world”, closely watched by all. He incites the inward-looking anxieties of a fractious republic at a moment when the so-called “unipolar order” (where one state is by far the most powerful) is disintegrating. He is trying to sustain America’s role, since the fall of the Soviet Union, as the undisputed, number-one power in the world.

    In 1901, another American president marked the end of the Gilded Age. He was young, highly intelligent, Harvard educated and cosmopolitan. He had ideas about how to make America great, yet respected in the world. His name was Theodore Roosevelt, and he became president by accident.

    Theodore Roosevelt, who became president by accident in 1901, sought to limit the power of those ‘malefactors of great wealth’ who thrived in the Gilded Age.
    AAP

    It took an assassin’s bullet to the stomach of his predecessor, William McKinley, to give momentum to the post-Gilded Age progressive era. Roosevelt sought to corral and limit the power of those “malefactors of great wealth” who thrived in the Gilded Age. But he also wanted the US to become – and remain – a world-leading imperial power. He succeeded.

    Like Trump, Roosevelt bypassed Congress to use the powers inherent in the presidency. Executive orders flowed out: for example, to protect forests for future use and create more national parks. The influence of people of great wealth was checked to some degree, though not enough.

    Roosevelt railed against trusts and Standard Oil was broken up by the Supreme Court, but the wealthy industrialists continued to be influential. Congress rebelled against his iconoclasm after the midterm elections of 1906 and denied him the money to do many further reforms, including his idea of making his conservation agenda a worldwide movement.

    This 1889 cartoon depicts powerful businessmen towering over senators, symbolising corporate dominance in politics.
    The Bosses of the Senate by Joseph Keppler, Puck/Wikimedia Commons

    Unqualified to lead a major world power

    Unlike Theodore Roosevelt, Trump is probably the least qualified figure to lead a major world power in living memory, in my opinion. In his first term, he was notoriously “difficult to brief on critical national security matters”, according to the New York Times. “He has a short attention span and rarely, if ever, reads intelligence reports, relying instead on conservative media and his friends for information.”

    In his 2018 book The Fifth Risk, journalist Michael Lewis showed how much Trump’s hubris and disregard of detail – which was reflected in his first-term transition team – affected his first administration’s ability to be informed about the workings of the US government and prepare to manage risk. “At most of the federal agencies, there were no real briefings,” a former White House official who closely watched the transition process of the first Trump presidency told him. “They were basically for show.”

    But who could replace Trump? The US is replete with Republican politicians happy to say yes to Trumpism. They are anxious and ambitious to take control of the MAGA movement in the 2028 presidential contest.

    I like to call them Trumpistas, because Trump’s first term as president often seemed to me like the antics of a banana republic’s leader. Today, one thinks of Argentina’s showman president Javier Milei. In Pope Francis’s words, Milei is in the category of “messianic clowns”.

    Protesters outside the Department of Justice in Washington.
    Jacquelyn Martin/AAP

    Just as Milei has acted like a crazy showman, Trump played at being an ill-informed expert in his first term. During the unfolding COVID-19 epidemic he acted as a kind of chief medical advisor to the nation, repeatedly advocating non-remedies like hydroxychloroquine, on national television, while the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Anthony Fauci, had to sit near him and endure. Trump appointed many unqualified people to administrative roles and refused to take advice from the presidential transition teams. It was chaos.

    So far, Trump’s second time around is only more hectic, more determined, more focused and, I believe, more dangerous in his policies for the world.

    Twain was a wise man. He understood we should never expect things to be the same the next time around. Instead, we should seek both the similarities and the differences in any era, to help us make more informed choices about the politicians we elect in the present.

    Like the historian who named the first Gilded Age, we should watch for the movement of underlying waves (or trajectories) of power and class within history. The excesses of that era were followed by a reactive wave of progressive reform, from 1900 to 1920. It remains to be seen how Trump’s Gilded Age might rhyme with the first – and what might follow. More