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Blue state poured thousands of dollars into study on reparations as effort launches
Washington reportedly began a study on “reparative actions” for descendants of slavery on Friday after allocating $300,000 to the effort.
Last year, the Washington State Legislature funded a study to examine the history and impact of slavery in the U.S. as it relates to “the geography of the former Washington and Oregon territories.”
The state also wants to analyze how residents were impacted by state laws and systems regarding criminal justice, economics and education, according to the Washington State Department of Commerce.
CHICAGO MAYOR LINKS RESTAURANT INDUSTRY TO ‘SLAVERY’ AS TIPPED WAGE FIGHT INTENSIFIES
State documents show that the legislature approved $300,000 to fund the project. The Washington State Department of Commerce reserved 10% of the money for administrative costs to manage the program and the remaining funds will be distributed yearly through fiscal year 2026 to 2027, beginning July 1 to the end of June.
The department is open to philanthropic or private donations to “expand the scope and depth of the study.”
Ashley Gardner, the lead director of the project, vowed a thorough review of the historical injustices during an info session last month.
“We intended to leave no research stone unturned,” Gardner said, according to Seattle Times reporting.
The amount of funding provided by the state resulted from consultation with the Commission on African American Affairs. The commission is a representative of the African American community in Washington advising the governor, legislature and state agencies on public policy and its execution.
Researchers must have a Ph.D. qualification in history, African American studies, sociology and several other listed social science and liberal arts degrees with a “direct focus” on “reparations or United States chattel slavery.” The study sought candidates with an “expertise in calculating the present value of uncompensated slave labor for direct victims of the United States chattel slavery.”
The launch of the study came after the state issued a survey to residents to help inform policy recommendations within the study.
“We’re tasked with looking at the national picture, and understanding, is Washington culpable, and if it is culpable, to what degree?” Marvin Slaughter Jr., co-lead of the valuation and policy team, said.
The research team, the Washington Department of Commerce and the Commission on African American Affairs did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
Washington follows several other local municipalities and states spanning from coast to coast looking to study the harms of slavery, Jim Crow-era policies, and redlining policies that led to housing discrimination in order to issue reparations in some form. Many others have already conducted a study, which resulted in reports on a detailed review of the past that linked to researchers’ policy recommendations.
A Chicago suburb — Evanston, Illinois — went as far as paying $25,000 in cash to Black residents to address past racial housing discrimination through its program.
As far as what reparations would look like in Washington, researchers reportedly believe it is too early to determine.
“Should it be cash payments? Should it be pensions? Should it be health care?” asked Thomas Craemer, the co-lead of the valuation and policy team on the research project.
“There’s a number of ideas,” he continued. “This is a research project. We’re not actually making any decisions, and we don’t want to. We want to let the community speak to us and to guide us.”
Despite efforts to issue reparations, some of the programs are facing obstacles due to budgetary or legal pressures. The cities of Evanston and San Francisco have been hit with lawsuits over alleged racial discrimination due to their reparations efforts.
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Curt Cignetti was so focused this offseason, he turned down all external requests: ‘I’m 95% football’
The Indiana Hoosiers, out of nowhere, won the National Championship, finishing off an undefeated 2025-2026 season.
It’s not an understatement to say that it was one of the most surprising outcomes in modern college football history. A program that had little track record of success, more commonly viewed as one of the easy wins on a team’s schedule than a legitimate contender for major postseason accomplishments. It was a remarkable achievement.
In fact, just before the regular season started, Texas Longhorns head coach Steve Sarkisian said he thought undefeated teams were a thing of the past. Then Indiana goes 16-0.
TEXAS HEAD COACH STEVE SARKISIAN THINKS DOMINANT CFB TEAMS ARE A THING OF THE PAST
You’d think after a season like that, the Hoosiers program, and especially head coach Curt Cignetti, would take some time to enjoy it. Bask in the glow, take some time off, do a sort of “victory lap” through the media, talking about what it meant.
Well, Indiana and Cignetti did the opposite. The exact opposite. Because he’s a football guy first, and football guys think about one thing: more football.
ESPN spoke to Cignetti on the Indiana campus, where he detailed how he approaches coaching and development.
“We’ve got a way of doing things,” he said. “How you do something is how you do everything. Consistency, performance is the key to the drill. So right now we’re teaching guys not only scheme, but standards, expectations, and how we want to play the game between the white lines, and I see us making progress.”
But perhaps the clearest indicator of how committed Cignetti is to keeping the focus on football came when ESPN reported that he told Indiana athletic director Scott Dolson and university president Pamela Whitten to “turn down all external requests and speaking engagements.” Why? So he could “continue to focus on football.”
“I’m 95% football,” Cignetti said. “We’ve said no to everything except for the Indy 500.”
ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!
“I’ve got to be able to do my job,” he said. “These things pull you out of the office, and they take up your time. I mean, I have a job to do. Believe it or not, I’m busy.”
That’s a football guy if we’ve ever seen one.
Obviously, all coaches are focused on their jobs. It’s an extremely demanding profession that requires dedication and extraordinary amounts of time for recruiting, game planning, and personnel evaluation. But it’s clear that Cignetti’s focus, potentially as a result of his time coaching with Nick Saban, has completely changed the Indiana program. Along with nailing the transfer portal, of course.
Players can see that single-minded purpose and respond to it, and the Hoosiers played with the discipline and efficiency of a team that mirrors its coach. Even though Cignetti has to replace Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza and other key players, it’s hard to bet against Indiana being right back in contention. Because Cignetti is all football.
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Man who pleaded guilty to raping 12-year-old relative is illegal immigrant from Honduras, DHS says
A Louisiana man who pleaded guilty to raping and impregnating his 12-year-old relative is an illegal immigrant from Honduras, federal officials confirmed to Fox News.
Jose Lopez-Montoya, 41, described by local media as a “Lake Charles man,” faces up to 99 years in prison after repeatedly abusing the minor.
The Department of Homeland Security told Fox News that Lopez-Montoya is a Honduran national who illegally entered the U.S. in 2011 under the Obama administration.
ILLEGAL IMMIGRANT ARRESTED FOR KIDNAPPING, ATTACKING TEEN NEAR TRUMP’S BACKYARD: POLICE
“Once again, the media is running cover for a criminal illegal alien. This sicko pled guilty to incest. He raped and impregnated his 12 year-old relative. ICE is working with our Louisiana partners to ensure this monster is never loose in American communities again,” the agency added.
“This ‘Lake Charles Man’ is actually an illegal alien from Honduras who admitted to illegally entering the U.S. in 2011,” DHS added.
The victim later gave birth in July 2024, and Lopez-Montoya admitted the child was his, according to KPLC.
Authorities said the abuse occurred over a two-year period while Lopez-Montoya served as the girl’s guardian.
Lopez-Montoya was arrested on two counts of first-degree rape and is also subject to an immigration detainer.
He pleaded guilty this week to aggravated crimes against nature by incest and faces 25 to 99 years in prison, according to KPLC. His sentencing is scheduled for April 28.
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Carville and co-host lament that Trump sparked a redistricting war, making both parties look cynical
Veteran Democratic strategist James Carville and his podcast co-host Al Hunt analyzed the results of the Virginia redistricting vote, agreeing that President Donald Trump started a redistricting war.
Democrats scored a major victory Tuesday when Virginia voters narrowly passed a congressional redistricting referendum that could give the party a significant boost in the battle for the U.S. House of Representatives majority in the 2026 midterm elections, the Associated Press reported.
The ballot measure gives the Democrat-controlled Virginia legislature — rather than the state’s current nonpartisan commission — temporary redistricting power through the 2030 election. It could result in a 10–1 advantage for Democrats in Virginia’s congressional delegation, up from their current 6–5 edge.
Hunt lamented on “Politics War Room” that the redistricting vote was a terrible thing, even if he personally would have supported it as a politically pragmatic necessity.
TRUMP HAILS TEXAS REDISTRICTING APPROVAL THAT COULD ADD FIVE GOP CONGRESSIONAL SEATS NATIONWIDE
“That is an awful outcome. Virginia is a blue state, but it’s not a 90% blue state,” he said. “Democrats, however, had no choice. This was all due to Donald Trump, who, desperate to avoid losing the House last year, demanded Republicans gerrymander in Texas and elsewhere and they were going to try to fix the elections. What he didn’t figure was that Democrats would respond just as ruthlessly, California and Virginia in particular.”
“I think the outcome in Virginia is terrible,” Hunt stressed. “I would have voted for it, even though I think it’s terrible. They did it by referendum. The voters decided rather than backroom deals like they did in Texas and in Missouri and elsewhere.”
He went on to argue that while this may be something to understandable for Republicans to take issue with, he advised, “Tell them to look next door at North Carolina, a purple, slightly red state [that] gerrymandered their congressional districts for what’s expected to be a 11-3 advantage.”
SPANBERGER FACES ‘BAIT-AND-SWITCH’ BACKLASH IN FINAL HOURS BEFORE REDISTRICTING REFERENDUM
“I’ll tell ya, 11–3 in North Carolina is every bit as bad as 10–1 in Virginia,” he said. “Trump, who only cares about himself, started this whole damn fiasco, and in the end, I think it may help Democrats more than it helps him.”
“Well, you got to blame the Supreme Court, too,” Carville said. “I mean, I hate to bring the bearer of bad news, but the great American institution called the Supreme Court said, ‘Well OK, there’s no equal protection. There’s no anything. The legislature can do what they want.’”
“The court has become so disreputable, so unpopular, and look at the polls. I’m not the only person that believes that it has to be saved from itself. That’s how bad it’s become,” Carville said. “But that they’re the people that let this stuff go with all this cockamamie 11-to-3 that, you know, I mean, as if the voters aren’t required to have equal protection during redistricting.”
DARK MONEY FLOODS VIRGINIA AHEAD OF REDISTRICTING VOTE THAT COULD HAND DEMOCRATS HOUSE EDGE
“I have no idea how you come up with that theory that that legal theory could work, but they say it does,” Carville said. “They’re corrupt. No code of ethics, no rules of conduct, no nothing.”
Hunt went on to suggest that politics now feels like a standoff where both sides are afraid to “unilaterally disarm” and instead opt for cynical power plays like gerrymandering.
“The problem with this is when you let politicians choose their voters rather than voters choose their politicians, you create politicians who have very little incentive to govern or compromise,” he said. “So it’s a terrible system, but this year it was all brought on by Donald Trump.”
“Yeah,” Carville agreed. “I think the Supreme Court did its part, but yeah, it wouldn’t have happened without Trump.”
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Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and was referred to the following statement by RNC national press secretary Kiersten Pels:
“46% of Virginians voted Republican in the last federal election, yet Democrats are rigging the system to cling to power and silence voters they can’t win over. This map is an unconstitutional partisan power grab designed to disenfranchise millions of voters and tilt the playing field. Abigail Spanberger broke her promise to Virginians by advancing a gerrymandered map that serves her party’s interests after pledging she would not. The RNC will continue this fight in court to protect Virginia voters and ensure fair representation across the Commonwealth.”
Fox News Digital’s Paul Steinhauser, Jasmine Baehr, and Charles Creitz contributed to this report.
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