Trump’s team takes aim at a major climate rule

A home in front of the John E. Amos coal-fired power plant in Poca, West Virginia, in February 2022. | Dane Rhys/Bloomberg via Getty Images

This story appeared in The Logoff, a daily newsletter that helps you stay informed about the Trump administration without letting political news take over your life. Subscribe here.

Welcome to The Logoff: The Trump administration is attacking Biden-era policies aimed at limiting air and climate pollution from power plants, part of a broader bid to stimulate the fossil fuel industry at the expense of the environment — and the future.

What’s the latest? The head of President Donald Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency today said the agency would begin the (lengthy) process of repealing a pair of environmental regulations on coal and natural-gas power plants.

What do the rules do?

The first regulated power plants’ carbon emissions, which drive climate change. The administration did not propose a replacement rule, meaning the proposal, CNN reports, would “effectively leave carbon emissions from US power plants unregulated.”

The second tightened regulations on mercury and other toxins that, above certain levels, are hazardous for human health.

What’s next? The administration is required to go through a formal process for changing rules, including a public comment period. More significantly, environmental groups are certain to sue to block the rule changes, arguing they violate the nation’s environmental laws and don’t follow the best available science. That means the rules’ fates are likely to be decided by the courts.

What’s the big picture? Scientists warn that human-driven climate change is already making the planet less hospitable to human life and that — absent major corrective action — it will continue to do so at an accelerating rate. The Trump administration is instead taking action to make the problem worse.

And with that, it’s time to log off…

There’s no particularly compelling reason to share these amazing photographs of birds today, but we shouldn’t need a special reason to take time to appreciate the world we’ve been gifted. So, to that end, here are last year’s winners of the Audubon Photography Awards. Thanks so much for reading, have a great night, and I’ll see you back here tomorrow.

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Trump blindsides JD Vance by forcing him to learn about major Iran update from reporters



Vice President JD Vance had no idea President Donald Trump had escalated the war in Iran until reporters tipped him off during a press conference in Hungary on Tuesday, according to reports.

A Washington Post reporter recommended Vance check his phone as he was on a stage with Trump ally Hungarian President Viktor Orbán, just after Trump had sent a serious threat warning on his Truth Social platform and said "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again," if Iran does not make a deal by his 8 p.m. ET deadline, The Daily Beast reported.

The Post reporter asked Vance if he had any new information that signaled a potential deal could be likely.

"I don’t—unless I have a text message from Steve Witkoff," Vance said in response, mentioning Trump's Middle East envoy.

He reached into his pocket and grabbed his phone, then realized the situation had changed.

"I do have a message from Steve Witkoff," Vance said awkwardly after receiving the message.

But the moment became noticeably more awkward, The Beast reported. A Reuters reporter followed up and said he might want to really check his phone.

"I do think you have to read that text because we have reporting that the United States is striking some targets in Kharg Island," the Reuters reporter said. "You did say that the military objectives of this war have been achieved. So could you help us understand why the president is still threatening to attack every bridge and every power plant in Iran?"

Vance, who served in the Marines and was briefly deployed in Iraq, has previously said he was against long-term wars in the Middle East and has had to balance his previous public statements with his current role in the Trump administration.

He tried to respond to the question.

"So you asked about Kharg Island," Vance said. "You know, my understanding, you know, having talked to Pete (Hegseth) and General Caine about this, is that we were going to strike some military targets on Kharg Island, and I believe we have done so."

"(The president)... has said very clearly, that we’re not going to strike energy and infrastructure targets until the Iranians either make a proposal that we can get behind or don’t make a proposal. But he’s given them until Tuesday, at 8 o’clock, so I don’t think the news on Kharg Island represents a change in strategy."