Wednesday, January 7,2026. Annette’s Roundup for Democracy.
What is happening.
Venezuela

Funeral de estado en Venezuela para enterrar a las 80 personas asesinadas por las tropas americanas que entraron ilegalmente en el país, lo bombardearon, y secuestraron al presidente y su mujer. ¿Por qué los medios no han hablado de estas victimas ni de sus familiares? pic.twitter.com/FnnKxnJj8Z
— Cesar Fonseca (@Cesar_Opinions) January 6, 2026
🚨BREAKING: Days after Saturday’s raid into Caracas, Venezuela, the Pentagon is now confirming that 7 U.S. servicemembers were injured.
— Konstantin Toropin (@KToropin) January 6, 2026
2 are still recovering while 5 have returned to duty.
A U.S. official said the injuries were gunshot wounds and shrapnel injuries.
🚨BOMBSHELL: It turns out Trump blew up Venezuela, for USELESS SLUDGE:
— CALL TO ACTIVISM (@CalltoActivism) January 7, 2026
Sen. Jeff Merkley says the oil is heavy and tar-like crude that would literally eat our pipes, requiring entire new refineries just to TOUCH IT.
This is a HISTORIC f*ckup on the scale of Iraq’s fake WMDs. pic.twitter.com/FilJMww0W2
What Senator Markey said is true. Trump either is lying or doesn’t know anything about Venezuelan oil.👇

Jackie reposted
This is also true. 👇
@JamesSurowiecki
Needless to say, if Venezuela does send us oil, and it's sold, that revenue goes to the US Treasury. Trump does not get to put it in a slush fund that he controls. The Constitution prohibits the Executive from spending any money that hasn't been appropriated by Congress.
Stephen Colbert’s brilliant destruction of Trump and Venezuela. Your day will be better if you watch. 12:29
Greenland
Canada and Denmark are Allies and partners in our shared responsibility for the security and resilience of the Arctic.
— Mark Carney (@MarkJCarney) January 6, 2026
As I reaffirmed to PM Frederiksen today, Canada will always support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Denmark, including Greenland. Together, we’ll… pic.twitter.com/vgPk4IE5OD
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni issued a joint Statement with other European countries denouncing Trump.
— Winter (@WPolitics1) January 6, 2026
"Greenland belongs to its people. It is for Denmark and Greenland, and them only, to decide on matters concerning Denmark and Greenland." pic.twitter.com/kf6b67LYG8
🇺🇸 🇬🇱 When the US bought the Virgin Islands from Denmark in 1917, part of the deal was US recognition of Danish sovereignty over all of Greenland.
— World of Statistics (@stats_feed) January 6, 2026
Wow. Rare bipartisan statement from Sens. Thom Tillis and Jeanne Shaheen, defending Denmark’s territorial integrity as Trump eyes Greenland:
— Stephen Neukam (@stephen_neukam) January 6, 2026
“When Denmark and Greenland make it clear that Greenland is not for sale, the United States must honor its treaty obligations and respect… pic.twitter.com/DnAqXefLqX
Another reason to win big in the 2026 midterms.👇
Let’s make Trump’s nightmare come true.
Trump fears impeachment will follow GOP midterm losses
President Trump told House Republicans on Tuesday that he fears impeachment if the GOP doesn't retain its majority in this year's midterm elections.
Why it matters: Trump is the only president in U.S. history to be impeached twice, and the president's party almost always loses seats in midterm elections.
Driving the news: "You've got to win the midterms," he said to an audience of House Republicans during their member retreat. "Because if we don't win the midterms, it's just going to be, I mean, they'll find a reason to impeach me."
Trump said his first term impeachments were "for nothing."
State of play: His remarks come on the fifth anniversary of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and days after the Trump administration's capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro on Saturday.
The speech was at the Kennedy Center, which Trump renamed to include his name after handpicking a new board.
Flashback: Trump was impeached in 2019 over abuse of power and obstruction of justice allegations related to his conduct with Ukraine. He was impeached in 2021 for claims he incited the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.
Both of Trump's impeachments resulted in Senate acquittal.
What we're watching: Economic pessimism could prove to be an early indicator of trouble for Republicans in the midterms.
Go deeper: House Republicans move to override Trump vetoes in rare show of defiance. (Axios)
One more thing.
What victories bring. 👇
Take nothing for granted.
Get ready to get out the vote.
With this victory, Virginia Governor-elect Abigail Spanberger will continue to have a Democratic trifecta when she is sworn in next week.
— Democrats (@TheDemocrats) January 7, 2026
Congrats, Senator-elect Jones! pic.twitter.com/oFr9Q18CTT
🚨BREAKING🚨
— The Political HQ (@ThePoliticalHQ) January 7, 2026
Democrat Charlie Schmidt has defeated Republican Richard Stonage in the Virginia House of Delegates District 77 Special Election.
This is a 🔵 hold. pic.twitter.com/3KUhsolqK1
South Carolina State House 98 Special Election
— VoteHub (@VoteHub) January 7, 2026
Early and Absentee vote + 10/22 precincts:
🔵 Sonja Ogletree Satani - 1,116 (50.3%)
🔴 Greg Ford - 1,098 (49.5%)
This district was Trump+8 in 2024.
We didn’t win a seat, but even Georgia moved toward us.
Georgia HD 23 Special Election
— VoteHub (@VoteHub) January 7, 2026
Final unofficial results:
🔴 Bill Fincher (R) - 3,563 (70.4%)
🔵 Scott Sanders (D) - 1,498 (29.6%)
This is a 6 point overperformance for Democrats vs. 2024, when the district was Trump +47.
BTW. The state of the US House of Representatives now!
With the retirement of Marjorie Taylor Greene, and the passing of LaMalfa, it looks like the GOP no longer holds a working majority until his seat is filled. It’s at 217. They need 218 for a majority. pic.twitter.com/DeKjBCeM1b
— Christopher Webb (@cwebbonline) January 6, 2026

More on January 6th.
On the 5th year Anniversary of Jan 6th, the White House has posted this series of blatant lies on their official website.
— Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) January 6, 2026
Every American should be disgusted by this. pic.twitter.com/Ahyxb3cV2O
BREAKING: Resurfaced video shows Charlie Kirk condemning Jan 6th rioters: “All the people that came into Congress today, that broke the law, should be held to the highest level of criminal prosecution.”
— Really American 🇺🇸 (@ReallyAmerican1) January 6, 2026
Stunning.pic.twitter.com/RICDQ0SeeF
January 6th participant Pamela Hemphill, who refused President Trump's pardon: "Once I got away from the MAGA cult and started educating myself about January the 6th, I knew what I did was wrong...I am guilty, and I own that guilt...I had fallen for the president’s lies." pic.twitter.com/p5Vae5Xj1o
— CSPAN (@cspan) January 6, 2026
House and Senate Democrats came together for a moment of silence to honor the lives lost on January 6, 2021. pic.twitter.com/YxmNepaKTl
— House Democrats (@HouseDemocrats) January 7, 2026
Tim Walz and the State of Minnesota.
Inside Tim Walz's dramatic political fall.

Tim Walz was nearly elected vice president in 2024. Just 14 months later, the Minnesota governor is ending his political career amid scandal, personal burnout and feuds with former allies — including Kamala Harris.
Why it matters: It's a stunning downfall for a man who vaulted onto the national stage less than two years ago and had been flirting with a 2028 run for president.
Zoom out: Walz announced Monday that he was ending his bid for a third term as governor, saying that a campaign would distract him from being effective in his last year in office.
His move came amid increasing scrutiny of alleged fraud in social services programs — and a barrage of attacks from the Trump administration — that led some anxious Democrats to question whether he could win another statewide election.
Walz has struggled personally and politically since former Vice President Harris picked him to be her running mate on the Democratic ticket in the summer of 2024.
The sudden national scrutiny of the Democrats' new candidate revealed that Walz had embellished parts of his biography — statements he spent much of the campaign trying to clean up.
Walz and Harris also have spent the past year subtly pointing fingers at one another about their abbreviated campaign for the White House.
"We shouldn't have been playing this thing so safe," he said last March.
In her recent book "107 Days," Harris recalled her exasperation watching Walz debate JD Vance, writing that Walz "felt bad he hadn't done better."
"In choosing Tim, I thought that as a second-term governor and 12-year congressman he would know what he was getting into," Harris wrote. "In hindsight, how could anyone?"
Harris released a statement Monday evening lauding Walz and saying the two had talked earlier in the day.
A source close to Walz pushed back against the idea that stumbles during his vice presidential bid impacted his political prospects, but acknowledged his heightened profile made him a target for the right. Zoom in: Shortly after the 2024 election,
Walz had a falling out with Minnesota Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan, a longtime ally, amid his frustration over her plan to succeed him. They've stayed away from each other in public since then.
More recently, Walz was engulfed by the ever-growing scandal in Minnesota, largely involving people of Somali descent allegedly defrauding the state and federal government of hundreds of millions of dollars through social services programs.
He tried to focus on what his administration had been doing to combat the problem, but the controversy continued to grow in recent months.
"This [was] on my watch," Walz said last month. "I am accountable for this, and more importantly, I am the one that will fix it."
Minnesota Democrats were increasingly worried the controversy could doom Walz's reelection campaign — and their chances in other crucial races.
"I would be at events, and Democrats would come up to me and tell me that they thought that Walz was going to have a really difficult time getting reelected," said Minnesota state Rep. Tina Liebling, a Democrat.
Between the lines: Walz also has struggled with grief since the assassination last summer of Minnesota House Democratic leader Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, in their home.
Walz has since acknowledged that he saw Hortman as a potential successor. "I talked to her about being governor," he told KARE 11 in July.
"This building feels different," Walz said of the state Capitol. "I am still struggling working here."
After Hortman was killed Walz became more ambivalent about a reelection bid, but some state party leaders urged him to run to avoid a messy primary.
The big picture: Walz's departure from the governor's race also shakes up the early jockeying for the 2028 Democratic presidential primary.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), who previously ran for president and could have run again, is now seriously considering a run for governor — likely precluding a 2028 campaign.
Walz had been prepping like a potential presidential candidate, including by embarking on a national tour. But by withdrawing from his reelection campaign, he likely has closed the door on a presidential campaign, too.(Axios)

Tim Walz answers.
https://x.com/allenanalysis/status/2008630537624117250?s=20
Honoring the great Nina Simone.
‘This is where it all started’ - Nina Simone’s childhood home gets long-awaited rehabilitation
North Carolina home preserved to commemorate legendary musician and civil rights activist, and to serve as arts hub.

Nina Simone’s childhood home in Tryon, North Carolina. Photograph: Nancy Pierce/Courtesy of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
It was a surreal experience for Dr Samuel Waymon, Nina Simone’s youngest sibling, to walk back into the renovated childhood home that he once shared with the singer and civil rights activist. On that day in the fall of 2025, Waymon, an 81-year-old award-winning composer, said that memories flooded back of him playing organ in the house and cooking on the potbelly stove with his mother as a child in Tryon, North Carolina. He was overjoyed to see the large tree from his youth still standing in the yard. Simone, born Eunice Waymon, lived in the 650 sq ft, three-room home with her family from 1933 to 1937.
After sitting vacant and severely decayed for more than two decades, the recently restored home is now painted white, with elements of its former self sprinkled throughout the interior. On the freshly painted mint-blue wall hangs a shadow box that encases the rust brown varnish of the original home. A small piece of the Great Depression-era linoleum sits on the restored wooden floor like an island of the past in a sea of the present.

Samuel Waymon sits in front of his and Nina Simone’s recently restored childhood home in Tryon, North Carolina. Photograph: Carri Bass Photography.
“It does conjure up wonderful tears of joy in my heart and in my eyes when I stand in that house, on the porch, going into the rooms where the stove is, and I’m saying, ‘Wow, this is actually real. The house is restored,’” Waymon said. “It’s like time travel.”
The home was bought for $95,000 in 2017 by four Black artists behind the collective Daydream Therapy LLC – the contemporary artist Adam Pendleton, the painter and sculptor Rashid Johnson, the abstract artist Julie Mehretu, and the collagist and film-maker Ellen Gallagher. For them, the structure is a assertion that Black history is worthy of investing in. The restoration comes at a time when historians and researchers say that the federal government is attempting to diminish the contributions of Black Americans. A presidential executive order has directed the vice-president, JD Vance, to discontinue spending on programs or exhibits based on race at the Smithsonian Institution and its museums and research centers. The restoration of Simone’s childhood home could serve as an example of how privately funded projects can preserve Black history during a time when federally funded programs are under threat.
On 1 September, the total rehabilitation of the home was completed after several years of planning and fundraising of nearly $850,000 in materials, construction and engineering costs for the renovation, which began in June 2024. The project has been overseen by the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund (AACHAF), which is now working with a consulting team and the Tryon community to create a long-term management and programming plan for the site. They hope to create a cultural district around the home, which is projected to open to the public for tourism in 2027.

Nina Simone in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1959. Photograph: Herb Snitzer/Getty Images.
“What I love is the fact that they didn’t destroy the basic structure of the house; they improved and restored it. So I think when the public or anyone goes into the house, they can feel the spirit and the energy that existed in that house,” Waymon said. “If one believes in spirits, one would have a sense of that when they walk in that house [that] Nina Simone, Eunice Waymon, was there. And that’s the joy I get from that. It’s very strong.”
It is pivotal for cultural sites within the Black community to be given as much weight as other populations, said Tiffany Tolbert, the AACHAF’s senior director for preservation. “Being able to preserve the birth or childhood home of these icons, activists and leaders in the African American community is really important so that future generations will understand where we came from, how these individuals came to be, the icons that we know them to be and also just understanding the African American experience more broadly in this country,” she said. “Having this home still extant, having it where people can visit, where they can learn, is significant because they greatly enhance the understanding of the African American experience in the middle 20th century in itself.”
‘We are the ones we have been waiting for’
The Simone home first came under Pendleton’s radar in the winter of 2016, when he received a message from a museum curator who alerted him that it was for sale. At first, Pendleton considered other people who might be able to preserve and protect the home, but then he pondered the final line from poet June Jordan’s Poem for South African Women: “We are the ones we have been waiting for.”
“I eventually realized that the person was not someone else. The person was me,” Pendleton said. “It was a gesture, an act that I thought could have more impact if it was a group of people joining forces to protect and preserve Nina Simone’s childhood home.”
With the help of another curator friend, Pendleton brainstormed a list of fellow artists who might be interested in joining him, and Johnson, Mehretu and Gallagher quickly came onboard.
When the collective bought the home the following year, Pendleton was contemplating what constituted American culture and how it was represented. The home signified Simone’s contributions to American history. “So much of how we understand our culture as a country and understand our place within it is through memory. And memory is, of course, embodied in individuals. It’s also embodied in different art forms, from painting and sculpture, and of course, in the case of Nina Simone, her music,” Pendleton said. “Her music is powerful from a formal standpoint, but also from a political and cultural one as well, as she was such a vocal supporter of the civil rights movement during her time.”
Walking through the home shortly after its purchase, Pendleton was struck by how much he felt the spirit of the home. “‘This is where it all started for Nina, in this humble home,’” he recalled thinking. “And it occurred to me, in that moment, that everything starts somewhere.”
The artists then worked with the AACHAF, which developed a preservation strategy for the home. In 2020, the AACHAF created a preservation easement, a legal agreement that restricts any future changes to the property and prevents demolition, which will be overseen by the historic protection non-profit Preservation North Carolina. Architectural consultants and the AACHAF created a blueprint of what the home looked like when it was first constructed by researching typical African American homes in North Carolina during the early 20th century and using an old family photograph from when the Waymons lived there. They also took clues from the materials used for the foundation and the roof to reconstruct the building and prevent further deterioration. The architects created a restoration plan that involved repairing the entryways and walls, evening out the floors, and creating an accessible ramp.

The AACHAF has also been involved in preserving the jazz saxophonist John Coltrane’s homes in Long Island, New York, and Philadelphia. It has also offered direct grants to the preservation of the jazz trumpeter and vocalist Louis Armstrong’s home in New York and blues singer Muddy Waters’ home in Chicago.
With the Simone home, Tolbert said, “a model is being built that blends both preservation of the building and program and interpretation of these spaces with an eye of having a greater understanding of the legacy and experience of these individuals, and how the communities where they lived or shaped who they became to be, both artistically as well as in their own right as leaders in the African American community”.
Pendleton and the rest of the collective have continued to act as representatives on the project. In 2023, he partnered with the AACHAF and tennis player Venus Williams to create an auction and fundraiser at the Pace Gallery in New York. The project also received funding from the Mellon and Tejemos foundations.
Now that the home is restored, the AACHAF and a consulting team are working with St Luke’s CME church, where Simone’s mother, Kate Waymon, preached, to incorporate the surrounding East Side neighborhood into future programming. Pendleton sees the future of the home as being a site for reflection, he said, and to “become a place where artists go with intention to write music, for example, or to perform in the town. In other words, if it can be a mechanism that propels history.”
If Simone were to visit the house today, Waymon said that his sister would be amazed and grateful that it has been restored. Along with being a representative of the building’s legacy as Simone’s last surviving sibling, Waymon is also keeping her memory alive by releasing a new duet with his sister of the song Love Me or Leave Me in mid-January 2026. His sister’s voice was recorded in 1967 and Waymon added in his own several months ago to weave the present with the past. The project is a flashback in time, similar to how he felt as he stood on the porch of his recently restored family home. (The Guardian)