The Insurrection Act gives the president sweeping power to deploy the military inside the U.S. Trump has promised to use it on Day One. Here's what that means, why everyone is talking about it, and how we begin to prepare if it happens.
Trump’s Cabinet leaked U.S. war plans in real time to a journalist. Senate Democrats enabled it. And House Republicans are pretending it never happened. That means House Democrats must lead. They don’t need a gavel to use their voices, procedures, and platforms to hold this administration accountable.
Trump’s Cabinet leaked U.S. war plans—and Senate Republicans confirmed his Deputy Secretary of State on the same day. They didn’t hesitate. They didn’t ask questions. They lined up behind the chaos. That’s not oversight—that’s complicity. Let’s make them feel the heat.
Trump’s Cabinet leaked U.S. war plans in a Signal group chat—and on the very same day, 9 Senate Democrats and Independent Angus King helped confirm one of his top State Department nominees. This wasn’t a mistake. It was a failure of leadership. And it cannot happen again. Senate Democrats must vote NO on every Trump nominee and keep the spotlight on this national security catastrophe.
Yesterday, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer surrendered leverage in the Senate, paving the way for a GOP funding bill that jeopardizes critical programs and accelerates the efforts of Trump, Musk and congressional Republicans to dismantle entire agencies and gut public services. Today, Indivisible met with leaders of our movement, both in New York and across the country, to discuss what this means for the fight to save our democracy. Based on those conversations, Ezra Levin, Co-Executive Director of Indivisible issued the following statement.