The following is an installment of Trump-Vance team accomplishments (each article is linked for further info):
(NOTE: Relax! We the People may not have even thought of some of this stuff, but the Trump-Vance ‘A’ team is already on top of it.)
1. Trump Preparing “Large Swath” of Federal Funding Cancellations to California
Trump warned California to stop allowing the unfair practice of mentally ill biological males competing in female sports in schools, but they did not listen. He also warned them against their sanctuary state policies in the past with respect to criminal illegals, which has put the safety of Californians and ICE agents at risk. They did not listen to that either.
Now, as has been reported, President Trump is preparing federal funding cancellations to the state of California.
Agencies have been told to identify grants the administration can withhold from California.
On Capitol Hill, at least one committee was told recently by a whistleblower that all research grants to the state were going to be cancelled.
GOP Rep. Darrell Issa of California, said:
Every university, every research organization, pretty much I saw them passing through here the last two days.
Issa told CNN his message to the fearful university representatives was:
We’re going to advocate for essentials, but I sent them back and said come to me with specifics. Come to me with the grant and the justification, and I’ll advocate for that. But I’m not going to advocate for no cuts; you just get more money every year. That’s how we got in this problem.
2. Appeals Court Has Ruled Trump Can BAN Associated Press from Oval Office
In a 2-1 ruling, the U.S. Court of Appeals for DC has determined President Trump can ban Associated Press reporters from the Oval Office. Here is the news:
JUST IN: A federal appeals court has agreed to let Trump ban the AP from the Oval Office again, a 2-1 ruling that blocked a lower (Trump-appointed) judge’s ruling that the content-based ban violated the constitution. pic.twitter.com/LORh9BEcWq
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) June 6, 2025
The two judges in this ruling were both appointed by President Trump, ruling the president will likely succeed on the merits of the case because access to the Oval Office has nothing to do with the First Amendment.
BOOM!
3. Trump Admin Ends Obiden Regime ‘Weaponized’ Airport Security Surveillance Program
The Department of Homeland Security is closing down the Quiet Skies program which was an initiative run by the TSA to flag fliers deemed by intelligence officials to “pose an elevated security risk” for “enhanced screening” and potential observation by federal Air Marshals.

Noem said:
[E]nhanced Quiet Skies screening was wrongly placed on [Obiden Regime] critic Tulsi Gabbard, who is now the Director of National Intelligence, [likely because she] was campaigning for Donald Trump.
Further:
[Also] preferential treatment was given to the husband of a [communist/globalist] senator.
On Wednesday, Homeland Security claimed William Shaheen, the husband of New Hampshire communist/globalist Senator Jeanne Shaheen, was given a blanket exemption from Quiet Skies after he was flagged for traveling “with a Known or Suspected Terrorist on three occasions.” The exception was granted after Senator Shaheen lobbied the federal government for her husband’s removal from the Quiet Skies list, according to the department.
Noem said:
It is clear the Quiet Skies program was used as a political rolodex of [The Obiden Regime] weaponized against its political foes and exploited to benefit their well-heeled friends.
Further:
I am calling for a Congressional investigation to unearth further corruption at the expense of the American people and undermining of U.S. national security.
The Quiet Skies program is not an aberration—it is the rule. The national security state has grown unaccountably large and increasingly willing to turn its tools inward on the American people. It is not enough to shut down one failed program—Republicans must go further and dismantle the entire surveillance state.
4. U.S. Economy Added 139,000 Jobs in May Even as Government Employment Shrank
President Trump’s program of shrinking the federal government is showing signs of progress. Employment in the federal government fell by 22,000 in May and is down 59,000 since January.
Council of Economic Advisers Chairman @SteveMiran reacts to yet another jobs report that exceeded expectations: "The President is succeeding in creating hundreds of thousands of jobs since he came into office… and they're all going to native-born Americans." pic.twitter.com/UEs6RnhVEM
— Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) June 6, 2025
Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said in a statement on the Department of Labor’s website:
Today’s jobs report demonstrates yet again that we are making a remarkable economic comeback.
The private sector added 140,000 jobs, more than the 120,000 forecast. The services sector expanded by 145,000 jobs while the goods producing side of the economy contracted by 5,000. Manufacturing employment contracted by 8,000 jobs but the prior month’s figure was revised up from a loss of 1,000 to a gain of 5,000.
Over the past 12 months, the economy has added 149,000 jobs each month on average.
Economists had been expecting 125,000 jobs and an unemployment rate unchanged at 4.2 percent.
The labor force participation rate slipped to 62.4 from 62.6 in the prior month.
Average hourly earnings climbed at a rapid rate, rising 0.4 percent in May. That is double the April rate of increase and more than the consensus forecast. Compared with a year ago, average hourly earnings are up 3.9 percent, handily beating inflation.
There were significant downward revisions to the March and April jobs numbers. March was revised down by 65,000 to 120,000 and April was revised down by 30,000 147,000. With these revisions, employment in March and April combined is 95,000 lower than previously reported.
5. AG Bondi Announced Serious Charges Against Maryland Man Deported to El Salvador
The Maryland man, Kilmar Abrego Garcia, who was deported to El Salvador has been returned to the United States and is facing human smuggling charges.

During a press conference, Attorney General Pam Bondi stated Abrego Garcia had been named in an indictment alleging he transported illegal immigrants within the country.
She said:
On May 21st, a grand jury in the Middle District of Tennessee returned a sealed indictment charging Abrego Garcia with alien smuggling and conspiracy to commit alien smuggling, in violation of Title 8 U.S.C. §1324.
Further:
[The Trump administration] presented El Salvador with an arrest warrant, and they agreed to return him to our country [and that] upon completion of his sentence, we anticipate he will be returned to his home country of El Salvador.
The attorney general outlined the allegations against Abrego Garcia, noting a grand jury “found that over the past nine years, Abrego Garcia played a significant role in an alien smuggling ring.”
Further:
This was not a side job—this was his full-time occupation.
And:
He was a human smuggler—of men, women, and children.
6. The Supremes Handed DOGE Big Wins in Social Security, Records Cases
In two separate emergency rulings issued simultaneously, the court lifted a block on DOGE personnel accessing sensitive Social Security Administration (SSA) systems and wiped a ruling forcing DOGE to turn over discovery in a records lawsuit.
Both rulings appeared to be along The Supreme’s ideological lines, with the court’s three Leftist-appointed justices publicly dissenting and all others abiding by the constitution.
The decisions come as President Trump’s relationship with billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk—the face of DOGE for months—turned into made-for-TV drama designed to lure gullible Senators into voting for the Big Beautiful bill.
In the Social Security case, the justices lifted a Maryland-based federal judge’s order blocking DOGE from snooping around the SSA’s systems that contain personally identifiable information, including Social Security numbers, medical and mental health records, bank data, and earnings history.
The Supreme’s second emergency decision stems from a FOIA lawsuit against DOGE.
The government had asked the justices to overturn a judge’s order allowing limited discovery into whether DOGE is an “agency,” which would dictate whether it is subject to FOIA requests.
U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper, an appointee of Obama, directed the release of all “recommendations” DOGE made to various federal agencies, in addition to other internal documents. He also ordered a deposition of acting DOGE Administrator Amy Gleason.
By agreeing to wipe that order, the Supreme Court’s decision marks a major victory for the Trump administration’s efforts to keep DOGE’s inner workings behind the veil. The majority said Cooper’s order was “not appropriately tailored” to whether DOGE was an agency.