With so much happened immediately, numerous organizations and individuals have launched databases, interactive maps and other trackers to catalog these actions of the government and their impacts on the civil rights of people in the United States. Using open source intelligence, public data, news coverage and other research, these tools are vital resources to document, contextualize and analyze the flood of federal activities that is basically remodeling the United States. Here are some examples of prominent.
The impact map
With the Impact project, Americans for the public service
This Interactive map It traces the changes to the funding, the workforce and policy of the US Federal Government throughout the country, documenting things such as mass workers, taking freezing, financing cuts and leasing ending. The tool also shows places where the funding were subsequently not incomplete, federal workers have been hired or can be, or the federal government has added a new service or benefit.
The map includes notations to specifically document impacts in the Rural US counties, the areas where the population is the non -white majority, places where 20 percent or more of the population lives below the poverty threshold and indigenous lands. It also catalogs the responses to these initiatives, including legal actions and local and state responses to financing cuts.
The United States disappeared tracker
By Danielle Harlow, data analyst
This dashboard The number of people affected by the mass deportations of the Trump administration conducted by US immigration and customs application (ICE) speaks. The number is already exceeding 4,000. The tool also monitors the state of each individual to the extent that information is available, noting their names, the country of original origin and where they are held, when available.
The tracker is fundamental to the status of each individual, noting if they are in custody of the ice, they have been issued temporarily or permanently, they were expelled, they are “self-segnated” or died in custody of ice. The tool also lists how many days their ordeal continued.
Ice flight tracking
By Tom Cartwright, lawyer for immigration rights
Tom Cartwright is a retired JP Morgan manager who uses flight monitoring data from all over the country to trace ice air deportation flights, return flights and flights to the United States. Public regular and specific updates on his Social Media Bluesky page and produces monthly relationships for the group for immigration rights Witness on the border About flights and counting of ice air. Over the past 12 months, Cartwright has collected data on about 8,000 air flights Ice, of which 824 in April. More than 1,500 of that total of 12 months were “removal flights”, while about 1,400 were “return of removal” flights. The other about 5,000 trips were “domestic ice air flights” in the United States.
Tracker of regulatory changes
from the institution of Brookings
The Tank Brookings Think has built a database by cataloging significant regulatory changes implemented by the beginning of the second Trump administration. It includes new executive orders and regulatory freezing, as well as the changes to the Trump administration under the executive orders issued by the previous administrations. For example, the White House has canceled an executive biden order of 2022 aimed at reducing the cost of prescription drugs and another since that year asking for research on the regulation of cryptocurrency.
TRUMP administration’s litiger for dispute
only for safety and law
The law and political publications Only security AND Lawfare Everyone offers databases that trace legal actions that challenge Trump’s administrative initiatives. The tools include names of cases, document numbers and jurisdictions, as well as the executive action that is contested and the state of the dispute. In most cases, the Trump administration has pursued its agenda without congress supervision or corresponding legislation and a series of administrative efforts of Trump who have been contested in court so far have been on pause or permanently blocked by continuing.
Far -right groups aimed at the month of pride
By Teddy Wilson, radical relationships
The anti-Lgbtq+groups, including fundamentalist Christian nationalists and white supremacist extremists, have targeted the events of the month of pride previously and it is expected that they will find themselves again in June, in particular given the violent rhetorical and executive actions of the Trump Administration relating to Trans Rights. This map It is monitoring the events of the month of pride across the country and the indications that the radical opposition groups plan to hit the meetings.