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Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
Sunday, January 25, 2026
EVERY LITTLE BIT: A HAIBUN
DIRGE FOR AMERICANS
by Greg Friedman
OUT OF SERVICE
by Jan Steckel
radios blaring, windows shattered,
litter the streets. It's like the rapture,
drivers disappeared. Alex Pretti's
beautiful baritone talks about service,
sacrifice, freedom that isn't free.
He's reciting his own epitaph,
just doesn't know it yet.
Boy Scout, choir boy, runner, biker,
named his dog Joule after a unit of energy.
Someone needs to immortalize him
in a song, like Joe Hill. I'm tired
of snuff videos featuring our best
and brightest. Bone-weary
of tinpot dictators, bantam Nazis
in custom greatcoats. Alex was a lover
who was loved, cared for people,
made them laugh. Now he's meat.
The pathologist will crack his chest,
weigh his heart, find it lighter
than a feather. Joe Hill tells Joule,
"Hear that? He's coming."
All the ghost cars flash their lights
in time to the whistles and shots.
Ghosts and Oceans, Jan Steckel's latest book, is a collection of short fiction. Her poetry book The Horizontal Poet won a Lambda Literary Award. Her books Like Flesh Covers Bone, Mixing Tracks, and The Underwater Hospital also won awards.
Saturday, January 24, 2026
IN THE AGE OF NIXON
a national student strike shut down
the colleges
Led to massive protests in the streets
Everyone could see that
shooting unarmed college students
was wrong
Under Trump
shooting a mother of three
with stuffed toys in her glove compartment
and a mutt in the back seat of her SUV
was okay
They called her a domestic terrorist
as if those stuffed toys were IED’s
And now a gang of six ICE agents
beat down an ICU nurse and shot him
dead on the street
And that’s okay too
His job was to save lives
not to take them
Blood on the mother’s SUV airbag
and on the sidewalk where the nurse
died tells us all we need to know
ANOTHER EXECUTION
| Cartoon by Nick Anderson |
This isn’t a game—
it’s not Risk, Trouble, Yahtzee.
It’s straight-up Nazi.
Cody Walker is the author of three poetry collections, all from the Waywiser Press. He lives and teaches in Ann Arbor.
WINTER WEATHER, MINNEAPOLIS, JANUARY 2026
| Cartoon by Nick Anderson |
US federal law enforcement officers on Saturday fatally shot an American citizen in Minneapolis for the second time in less than three weeks. Saturday morning’s killing of US citizen Alex Pretti, 37, comes after Renee Nicole Good, also a 37-year-old American citizen, was shot to death on 7 January by a federal immigration officer in Minneapolis, with video showing her trying to drive away from a confrontation, sparking protests nationwide. The Guardian, January 24, 2026
THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION IS MAKING ME
queer. Therefore, I intend to fight
fascism with flamboyance.
I will swirl about America
in Deborah Kerr's dress from The King and I
and warble in my blithest trill
getting to know you,
getting to know all about you...
The Trump Administration
is turning me gayer than Morrissey.
Learn to hate me, you cancerous fuckers.
Assemble the goddamn ways.
I will be bi, pan,
voile et vapeur, AC/DC,
gleefully switch-hitting, a three-dollar bill.
I will blare Culture Club at Republican lawmakers,
I will Bowie and Freddie them into submission.
I will glitter the evangelicals, curtsy
to Oklahoma deacons. I will strew
pink carnations and heart-shaped confetti
on the asphalt trodden by ICE.
I will incense the icons of Keith and Renée
and all the others whose names go unreported.
I will vanquish the murderers with the B-52s, Elton John,
Alicia Bridges, Dusty Springfield,
the Pet Shop Boys, the Communards.
I will preach and prooftext, in season, out of season,
with the limber cadenzas of Ginsberg,
with the dapper iambics of Auden,
with the plaintive ballads of Lorca.
I will be the filthy limerick
in your Epistle to the Romans,
the drag queen at your prayer breakfast,
the non-binary poet in your Department of War.
I will take your Supreme Court
and Diana Ross it to a timely and fabulous death.
Thomas DeFreitas (he/him/his) was born in Boston in 1969. He was educated at the Boston Latin School, and attended the University of Massachusetts in Amherst for three calamitous semesters. He has published five collections with Kelsay Books, including Elegies & Devotions (2025) and Winter in Halifax (2021). His latest, Consider, is seeking a publisher. Thomas is a resident of Arlington, Massachusetts, and (along with his scores of poetfriends) is currently plotting to take over the explorable universe and permeate it with lyrical benevolence.
Friday, January 23, 2026
FOR LIAM CONEJO ROJAS, 5 YEARS OLD, SEIZED BY ICE
| Liam Conejo Ramos, 5, is seen being detained in a photo released by Columbia Heights Public Schools officials that has prompted anger in the Twin Cities. Credit.: Columbia Heights Public Schools via The New York Times, January 22, 2026 |
This is what I would say, would try to say.
Liam, are you okay?
No, I didn’t think so.
Come sit by me.
Yes, I’m crying, I’m crying a little, sorry.
Can I hold your hand? We can just sit quietly.
You are safe here.
If only that was true.
……..
A little better now?
I’m so sorry what happened to you.
It was very bad.
Those were very bad people, and it was scary.
But you’re safe now.
If only that was true.
Your father and mother love you.
So many people love you.
I’m sorry about the bad people, but there are good people too.
We will make sure nothing like that ever happens again.
Not to you, or to any other kid.
We must make that true.
You are very brave. Thank you for being so brave.
Thank you for sitting with me.
I love you, Liam.
Are you ready to play?
Great, your mother is right here, and your friends.
Go play.
I’ll be going now. There are a lot of things I have to do.
Good people, there is so much we have to do.
Pepper Trail is a poet and naturalist based in Ashland, Oregon. His poetry has appeared in Rattle, Atlanta Review, Spillway, Kyoto Journal, Cascadia Review, and other publications, and has been nominated for Pushcart and Best of the Net awards. His collection Cascade-Siskiyou was a finalist for the 2016 Oregon Book Award in Poetry.
GRACE IN MINNEAPOLIS IN THE AGE OF ICE
by Barbara Draper
It’s afternoon as I sit looking out the library window—
across the street a testy wind snaps a line-up of flags—
the first for Ukraine, the next to remember the MIAs and POWs,
the next to bring them home, and finally, an American flag.
Earlier this morning as I stood on a corner, a whistle
around my neck, on look-out for ICE,
an Hispanic mom, holding her daughter’s hand,
walking her safely to school,
passes by, touches my sleeve
and thanks me.
Me of the privileged, white variety,
grandmotherly, sure in my safety.
Tears welled up—
for her or for me?
The unfairness, the enigma, the grace she gave
with her great big heart. She touching me.
Barbara Draper’s poems have been published in Poetry East, Potomac Review, Rust + Moth and Sow’s Ear. She has authored one book of poems, Sometimes a Door. She lives in the Minneapolis area and is active in climate change work as well as running after three grandchildren.
SCULPTURE
Thursday, January 22, 2026
GOOD NIGHT AMERICA, JANUARY 2026
snug in shells. Goodnight hens, asleep on perches.
Good night good people of Minneapolis St. Paul
hanging sheets of plastic over doors broken down
by ICE agents. Lullaby your little ones to sleep.
Good night neighbors with cameras and whistles.
Good night Mr. President, tweeting your fury,
slide easy into haunting dreams of disloyalty,
dreams of failed plastic surgery, bad poll numbers,
dreams of not enough admirers or paying guests—
Remember the kerfuffle when caviar was served
at Mar-a-Lago in tiny plastic spoons? Never enough!
It’s natural to want more caviar, money and power.
It’s natural to want kids not to be afraid or hungry
or molested or separated or zip-tied or teargassed.
MY COUNTRY FOR A MEDAL
by Anne Herrick
Partially based on lines from Shakespeare's Richard III, Act 5
| Cartoon by Ann Telnaes |
My medal,
my medal!
America undone for my medal.
Forsooth, sire, I will assist you
in claiming this precious gold
Loyalist, I have lain my life upon this medal
I have set seven squabbles to peace—
Nay—I have in fact settled eight.
I must therefore have my medal.
I will, I must, doom America for my medal.
Courageous Sire, it is Norway
which has undone your gold,
I must find the wretch
that decreed the providence of this prize
Great God of Heaven, say amen
I will usurp, I will slay, this Danish bloody dog
which hath denied what has always been my due.
I will pluck this traitor’s foreign Greenland
and put its gold upon my oval mantelpiece.
On bended knee I needs say, my Gracious Sire
that Denmark is not quite where is Norway —
it is avowedly smallest, in the cold North Sea.
Oh, Slave, I will choose who is to blame.
I will push Denmark to weep in streams of blood.
I will save Greenland from Denmark’s yoke of tyranny,
dig far into the bowels of its land,
will cast its destiny with the doomed dome of America.
I know that true hope flies with swallow’s wings,
that it is the meaner creatures that make kings.
Anne Herrick has published a few poems and prose in the US and UK.



