1 State Goverance - The Background and the Challenge - Optional 1 State Goverance - The Background and the Challenge - Optional
Over the last year there have been sweeping changes within the federal government and how it addresses the issues of climate change, abortion and guns. In order to understand the contemporary role of state AGs in dealing with these issues it is important to grasp the extent of these federal changes. These optional readings are designed to assist you in that understanding.
1.1 Changes in the USDOJ, EPA and FTC in 2025 1.1 Changes in the USDOJ, EPA and FTC in 2025
1.2. Trump DOJ Dropped 23,000 Criminal Investigations in Shift to Immigration — ProPublica - March 30, 2026
1.3. Demanding Support for Trump, Justice Dept. Struggles to Recruit Prosecutors, NYT, Feb 6, 2026
1.4. Trump’s ‘Superstar’ Appellate Judges Have Voted 133 to 12 in His Favor, NYT, January 11, 2026
1.5. Depleted and Distracted, Justice Dept. Staff Fear Losing Focus on Potential Threats, New York Times, Jan 8, 2026
1.6. Despite Supreme Court Wins, Elite D.O.J. Unit (Solicitor General) Has Seen Mass Turnover, New York Times, Dec 1, 2025
1.7. Trump Administration Retreats From White-Collar Criminal Enforcement, Wall Street Journal, April 13, 2025
1.8. Two-thirds of the DOJ unit defending Trump policies in court have quit, Reuters, July 14, 2025
1.9. Justice Department struggles as thousands exit — and few are replaced, Wash. Post, Nov 10, 2025
1.10. 60 Attorneys on the Year of Chaos Inside Trump’s Justice Department - The New York Times - Nov. 16, 2025
1.11. E.P.A. to Stop Considering Lives Saved When Setting Rules on Air Pollution, NYT, Jan 12, 2025
1.12. The F.T.C. Chairman Who Tilted the Agency to Trump, NYT, Dec. 8, 2025
1.13. Trump administration shuts down EPA's scientific research arm : NPR, July 20, 2025
1.14 Example of State Based Reaction to Federal Changes - CDC - Optional 1.14 Example of State Based Reaction to Federal Changes - CDC - Optional
Throughout this Reading Group we will be indentifying initiatives being undertaken by state government and their attorneys general in light of the shifts in federal regulation. In the area of public health states have actually expanded and created state based agencies. These readings show how that happened.