New York Rangers trade veteran winger Chris Kreider to the Anaheim DucksNew Foto - New York Rangers trade veteran winger Chris Kreider to the Anaheim Ducks

Veteran winger Chris Kreider is heading to the Anaheim Ducks as part of a trade from the New York Rangers. The teams completed the deal Thursday. The Rangers are getting center prospect Carey Terrance and a third-round pick from the Ducks for Kreider and a fourth-round pick, plus the salary cap space they can use this summer. "We want to thank Chris Kreider for all of his contributions to the Rangers organization over his stellar career," general manager Chris Drury said. "Chris has been an integral part of some of the most iconic moments in Rangers history, including setting multiple franchise records and helping the team advance to the 2014 Stanley Cup Final." Kreider, 34, agreed earlier in the day to waive his no-trade clause to accept the move. "Chris Kreider is the type of player we were looking to add this offseason," Ducks GM Pat Verbeek said. "He has size, speed and is a clutch performer that elevates his game in big moments. Chris also upgrades both of our special teams units, something we really needed to address." Moving on from Kreider is Drury's first offseason change to a roster that underachieved and missed the playoffs following a trip last year to the Eastern Conference final. Kreider joins former Rangers captain Jacob Trouba in Southern California after the defenseman wastraded to the Ducksin December. Kreider is the franchise leader with 84 playoff goals and is third in regular-season goal-scoring with 326. He spent his first 13 seasons with New York after the team drafted him 19th in 2009. The 6-foot-3, 230-pound Massachusetts native has two years left on his contract at an annual salary cap hit of $6.5 million. ___ AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

New York Rangers trade veteran winger Chris Kreider to the Anaheim Ducks

New York Rangers trade veteran winger Chris Kreider to the Anaheim Ducks Veteran winger Chris Kreider is heading to the Anaheim Ducks as par...
New England Patriots to unveil Tom Brady statue before preseason game on Aug. 8New Foto - New England Patriots to unveil Tom Brady statue before preseason game on Aug. 8

Tom Brady still has to wait a few years before he can wear a gold jacket. He'll be in bronze this summer, though. The New England Patriots announced Thursday that they will unveil a Brady statue at Gillette Stadium on Aug. 8 before their preseason game against the Washington Commanders. A legacy etched in bronze forever.@TomBrady's statue will be unveiled on 8/8 prior to Patriots vs. Commanders.pic.twitter.com/mRfKkbqC7i — New England Patriots (@Patriots)June 12, 2025 While Brady finished his storybook career with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, even claiming his seventh and final Super Bowl victory with the NFC South club, he spent 20 of his 23 seasons in the NFL with the Patriots. New England famously selected Brady out of Michigan with the 199th overall pick in the sixth round of the 2000 NFL Draft. He went on to outplay not only the six quarterbacks who were taken before him that year, but also every quarterback who's ever taken the field. Initially a feel-good story, Brady turned the Patriots into the league's greatest supervillain, ushering in the sport's most dominant dynasty to date — a six-Super Bowl reign that spanned two decades. Along the way, Brady also collected nine AFC championships and a whopping 17 AFC East titles. The three-time NFL MVP is the league's all-time leader in wins (251), Pro Bowl selections (15), Super Bowl MVPs (5), passing yards (89,214) and passing touchdowns (649). When the lights shone the brightest, Brady was at his best. He engineered 59 fourth-quarter victories after his team was either tied or trailing. Plus, no player has more seasons with a postseason appearance than he does. Brady made the playoffs 20 times. Additionally, he's atop the league's all-time postseason leaderboard for wins (35), games started (48), Super Bowl appearances (10), Super Bowl wins (7), completions (1,200), passing yards (13,400), passing touchdowns (88), game-winning drives (14) and fourth-quarter comebacks (9). The Patriots Hall of Fame waived its usual four-year waiting period andinducted Brady in front of a sold-out Gillette Stadium on June 12, 2024.

New England Patriots to unveil Tom Brady statue before preseason game on Aug. 8

New England Patriots to unveil Tom Brady statue before preseason game on Aug. 8 Tom Brady still has to wait a few years before he can wear a...
Exclusive-Kennedy's new vaccine adviser was expert witness against Merck vaccineNew Foto - Exclusive-Kennedy's new vaccine adviser was expert witness against Merck vaccine

By Chad Terhune and Dan Levine (Reuters) -One of the new vaccine advisers picked by U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has earned thousands of dollars as an expert witness in litigation against Merck's Gardasil vaccine, court records show. Martin Kulldorff, a biostatistician and epidemiologist who publicly criticized COVID-era lockdowns, is one of eight new members named by Kennedy on Wednesday to the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a highly influential panel that recommends which shots should be administered to the American public. Kennedy fired the entire previous 17-member committee of expert vaccine advisers this week, claiming they were "plagued with persistent conflicts of interest" from financial ties to drugmakers. The departing experts say their work was subjected to rigorous vetting and rules for recusal for any conflict. Kulldorff recently served as an expert witness for plaintiffs who accused Merck of concealing the risks of Gardasil, a vaccine for the prevention of cancers caused by human papillomavirus (HPV). In March, a federal judge in North Carolina ruled in favor of Merck in one of those cases that included about 200 lawsuits. At a deposition in October, Kulldorff testified that the plaintiffs paid him $400 an hour and he had already billed for about $33,000 in legal work on the case through late September. He said he also received a $4,000 retainer in the North Carolina case, according to court documents. Kulldorff is also listed as an expert witness in a similar case pending against Merck in Los Angeles state court, records show. Under ACIP's rules, committee members cannot serve as a "paid litigation consultant or expert witness in litigation involving a vaccine manufacturer" during their tenure on the panel. Prior work as an expert witness against drugmakers may require a waiver from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and recusal from votes involving Merck and HPV vaccines. The agency has said in its rules it "will generally consider issuance of waivers in specific situations." Kulldorff and plaintiffs lawyers in the Merck case did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Merck declined to comment. A spokesman for Kennedy's Health and Human Services Department said on Wednesday that "all newly appointed ACIP members were thoroughly vetted." HHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Kulldorff. KENNEDY AND GARDASIL Before joining the Trump administration, Kennedy was a longtime plaintiffs' lawyer and played an instrumental role in organizing mass litigation against Merck over its Gardasil vaccine, which brought in sales of $8.58 billion in 2024. The shot is recommended as a routine immunization for 11 and 12-year-olds by the CDC to prevent cervical and certain head and neck cancers caused by the virus. Kennedy's work on the Gardasil case drew attention from Congress during the confirmation process for health secretary. Kennedy said he would divest his financial interest in that litigation to his non-dependent, adult son. In a post on X, Kennedy praised Kulldorff as a "leading expert in vaccine safety and infectious disease surveillance." He also cited his previous service as a government adviser, including on a vaccine safety subgroup assisting the full ACIP board. Kulldorff gained prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic as a co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration in October 2020, which called on public health officials to roll back lockdowns, arguing they were causing irreparable harm. One of his co-authors was Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, who now serves under Kennedy as National Institutes of Health director. Kulldorff wrote a 29-page report on Gardasil that was filed on January 6 in the North Carolina case. His conclusion was that Merck had "not done an appropriate job evaluating potential safety problems" related to the shot. He also highlighted his prior service on ACIP's vaccine safety working groups. Gardasil was approved in the U.S. in 2006 after going through clinical trials to prove its safety and efficacy. "I have served on two CDC ACIP vaccine safety working groups, concerning the measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) and COVID vaccines," Kulldorff wrote. He also wrote in his litigation report that he developed some of the methods that are used "by FDA and CDC in their routine post-market vaccine safety surveillance work." (Reporting by Chad Terhune in Los Angeles and Dan Levine in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Mike Spector in New York; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Bill Berkrot)

Exclusive-Kennedy's new vaccine adviser was expert witness against Merck vaccine

Exclusive-Kennedy's new vaccine adviser was expert witness against Merck vaccine By Chad Terhune and Dan Levine (Reuters) -One of the ne...
Ex-congressman Billy Long confirmed as commissioner of the IRS, an agency he once sought to abolishNew Foto - Ex-congressman Billy Long confirmed as commissioner of the IRS, an agency he once sought to abolish

WASHINGTON (AP) — Former U.S. Rep.Billy Longof Missouri was confirmed on Thursday to leadthe Internal Revenue Service, giving the beleaguered agency he once sought to abolish a permanent commissioner after months of acting leaders and massive staffing cuts that have threatened to derail next year's tax filing season. The Senate confirmed Long on a 53-44 vote despite Democrats' concerns about the Republican's past work for a firm that pitched a fraud-ridden coronavirus pandemic-era tax break and about campaign contributions he received after President Donald Trump nominated him to serve as IRS commissioner. While in Congress, where he served from 2011 to 2023, Long sponsoredlegislation to get rid of the IRS, the agency he is now tasked with leading. A former auctioneer, Long has no background in tax administration. Long will take over an IRS undergoing massive change, including layoffs and voluntary retirements of tens of thousands of workers and accusations that then-Trump adviser Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency mishandledsensitive taxpayer data. Unions and advocacy organizations have sued to block DOGE's access to the information. The IRS was one of the highest-profile agencies still without a Senate-confirmed leader. Before Long's confirmation, the IRS shuffled through fouracting leaders, including one who resigned over a deal between the IRS and the Department of Homeland Security toshare immigrants' tax datawith Immigration and Customs Enforcement and another whose appointment led to a fight between Musk and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. After leaving Congress to mount an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate, Long worked with a firm that distributed the pandemic-era employee retention tax credit. That tax credit program was eventually shut down after then-IRS CommissionerDaniel Werfeldetermined that it was fraudulent. Democratscalled for a criminal investigationinto Long's connections to other alleged tax credit loopholes. The lawmakers allege that firms connected to Long duped investors into spending millions of dollars to purchase fake tax credits. Longappeared before the Senate Finance Committeelast month and denied any wrongdoing related to his involvement in the tax credit scheme. Ahead of the confirmation vote, Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon, the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, sent a letter to White House chief of staff Susie Wiles blasting the requisite FBI background check conducted on Long as a political appointee as inadequate. "These issues were not adequately investigated," Wyden wrote. "In fact, the FBI's investigation, a process dictated by the White House, seemed designed to avoid substantively addressing any of these concerning public reports. It's almost as if the FBI is unable to read the newspaper." Democratic lawmakers have also written to Long and his associated firms detailing concerns with what they call unusually timed contributions made to Long's defunct 2022 Senate campaign committee shortly after Trump nominated him. The IRS faces an uncertain future under Long. Tax experts have voiced concerns that the 2026 filing season could be hampered by the departure of so many tax collection workers. In April,The Associated Press reportedthat the IRS planned to cut as many as 20,000 staffers — up to 25% of the workforce. An IRS representative on Thursday confirmed the IRS had shed about that many workers but said the cuts amounted to approximately the same number of IRS jobs added under the Biden administration. The fate of the Direct File program, the freeelectronic tax return filing systemdeveloped during President Joe Biden's Democratic administration, is also unclear. Republican lawmakers and commercial tax preparation companies had complained it was a waste of taxpayer money because free filing programs already exist, although they are hard to use. Long said during his confirmation hearing that it would be one of the first programs that come up for discussion if he were confirmed. Long is not the only Trump appointee to support dismantling an agency he was assigned to manage. Linda McMahon, the current education secretary, has repeatedly said she is trying to put herself out of a job by closing the federal department and transferring its work to the states. Rick Perry, Trump's energy secretary during his first term, called for abolishing the Energy Department during his bid for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination. ___ Follow the AP's coverage of the Internal Revenue Service athttps://apnews.com/hub/internal-revenue-service.

Ex-congressman Billy Long confirmed as commissioner of the IRS, an agency he once sought to abolish

Ex-congressman Billy Long confirmed as commissioner of the IRS, an agency he once sought to abolish WASHINGTON (AP) — Former U.S. Rep.Billy ...
Wimbledon announces record $73M prize fund and $4M for singles championsNew Foto - Wimbledon announces record $73M prize fund and $4M for singles champions

LONDON (AP) — Wimbledon's prize money has risen to a record 53.5 million pounds (about $73 million) and the singles champions will each earn three million pounds ($4 million), All England Club officials announced on Thursday. The total amount is 3.5 million pounds ($6.8 million) more than last year, an increase of 7% — and exactly twice the pot handed out to competitors at the grass-court Grand Slam 10 years ago. "We're immensely proud of the fact that if you look back 10 years, you can see the increase over that period and 7% this year," All England chair Deborah Jevans said. "And we have listened to the players, we have engaged with the players." The 2025 winners' checks represent an 11.1% jump on last year's prizes for the men's and women's singles champions and comes amid growing player demands for a bigger share of grand slam profits. Players who lose in the first round of singles will get 66,000 pounds, up 10% year on year. "The focus on just the prize money at four events, the Grand Slams, does not get to the heart of what the challenge is for tennis," Jevans added. "The challenge with tennis is the fact that the players don't have an offseason which they want, they have increasing injuries that they're speaking about, and we've always said that we as Wimbledon are willing to engage and talk with the tours to try and find solutions, and that door remains open." Wimbledon starts on June 30 and runs until July 13. For the first time in the oldest Grand Slam,line judges will be replacedwith electronic line-calling. ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Wimbledon announces record $73M prize fund and $4M for singles champions

Wimbledon announces record $73M prize fund and $4M for singles champions LONDON (AP) — Wimbledon's prize money has risen to a record 53....
Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'New Foto - Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'

INDIANAPOLIS — The Pacers are who they are because of Tyrese Haliburton — because of the way his predilection toward frenetic and decentralized possessions produces one of the NBA's most efficient and effective offenses; because of his swashbuckling swagger; because of his growing highlight reel of unbelievable late-game shot-making. The Pacers are who they are because of Pascal Siakam — because of the matchup nightmare he presents opponents on offense; because of the gap-plugging boost he offers Indiana's defense; and because of how perfectly his ever-revving motor fits within the Pacers' offensive ecosystem. But throughout this postseason, as Indiana's All-Stars have received praise for their roles in propelling and prolonging a magical run that now sitsjust two wins away from an NBA championship, those stars — and head coach Rick Carlisle — have refused to accept too much individual acclaim. Instead, they've repeatedly insisted that it's something else that makes them special: The Pacers are who they are because oftheir depth— because of how many damn good players they have; because of how their ability to contribute has allowed Carlisle to avoid overloading his stars and starters in Indiana's frenzied and fast-paced two-way approach; and because of how consistently they've tilted the run of play in Indiana's favor. "Look, this is the kind of team that we are," Carlisle said after Indiana scored a116-107 winin Game 3 of the 2025 NBA Finals on Wednesday. "We need everybody to be ready. It's not always going to be exactly the same guys that are stepping up with scoring and stuff like that, but this is how we gotta do it, and we gotta do it as a team, and we gotta make it as hard as possible on them." Which is precisely what Bennedict Mathurin, T.J. McConnell, Obi Toppin and the rest of Indiana's reserve corps did against the Thunder on Wednesday night at a raucous Gainbridge Fieldhouse. "Honestly, our second group really won us the game," Haliburtontold NBA TV. In a game decided by three possessions, Indiana's bench outscored Oklahoma City's 48-19. Twenty-seven of those 48 points belonged to Mathurin — a career playoff high, tied with Jalen Rose for themost ever scored by a Pacer off the bench in a playoff game, and tied with Manu Ginóbili and Jason Terry for thethird-most ever by a reserve in a Finals game. The third-year swingman has seen his effectiveness, minutes and opportunities wax and wane in this postseason, but he was absolute nails from the second he checked in at the start of the second quarter on Wednesday. "I think he was great being aggressive," Siakam said. "That's who we want him to be — when he's aggressive, he's active on defense, he's picking up full-court, he's cutting. Like, when he's doing that … I mean, it looks easy out there for him." Mathurin met the Thunder's vaunted athleticism and physicality with plenty of his own, attacking the paint, finding opportunities to get to his spots, and never once wavering on a night that saw him go 9-for-12 from the field, with five of those buckets coming in the paint — more than any Pacer scored on the interiorin Game 2— and a couple more coming between the paint and the arc. "I thought he did just a great job of playing within what we do so well," Haliburton said. "He did a great job of coming off handoffs, reading the pocket, rising up from the midrange. This is a defense that will give that [midrange shot] up — analytically, that's not the best shot — but I thought he did a great job of hunting that and getting downhill." And when he got downhill, he did what he does better thanall but a few wing players in the NBA: hunt contact, drawing seven fouls in just 22 minutes of work and going 7-for-8 from the free-throw line — vital points in a series where Indiana has often struggled to consistently generate offense in the half-court. "That's kind of what he does: He's a scorer," said Thunder guard Alex Caruso. "We let him get to his fastball for the night, which is impact the game by scoring the basketball. Granted, he made a couple of tough ones, but we probably didn't make it tough on him to start initially." Players this century to score 25+ in a Finals game at 22 or younger:Bennedict MathurinKawhi LeonardLeBron JamesTony ParkerKobe Bryantpic.twitter.com/arYhHZiUrZ — NBA (@NBA)June 12, 2025 Coming up with a game this big on a stage this big — the youngest player to score 25 in a Finals game since Kawhi Leonard in 2014, the youngest player to score 25 off the bench in a Finals game since they started tracking starters and bench players in 1970 — had to feel particularly sweet for Mathurin, who missed all of Indiana's run to the 2024 Eastern Conference finals after suffering a torn labrum in his right shoulder about five weeks before the start of the playoffs, and who'd been counting the days until he could have his moment. No, like, literally. "After he sustained the injury — it was either in February or early March — you can order these calendars that start on a specific day, and then they count days," Carlisle recalled Wednesday. "And so — I think it was Dr. [Neal] ElAttrache that did the surgery — there was a calendar sitting in our training room. And every day, he would come in and take one off, take one off. He was counting the days down to being cleared sometime in August, and then be able to begin training camp, begin 5-on-5 with our guys in September, and then be in training camp, really, with his eyes firmly set on an opportunity in the playoffs." "As much as this is a dream right now, I'm not trying to live in my dream," said Mathurin. "I'm trying to, like, live in the present and make sure the dream ends well, which means winning [the] next game and winning a championship." Joining Mathurin in wreaking havoc in the second unit: backup point guard McConnell, who became just the16th playerto score 10 points, dish 5 assists and snag 5 steals in a Finals game since the NBA started tracking steals in 1973 … and the first to ever do it off the bench. T.J. MCCONNELL: ALL HEART, ALL HUSTLE😤 10 PTS😤 5 AST😤 5 STLFirst player since 1973-74 to record these numbers off the bench in a Finals game 🤯🤯pic.twitter.com/sKcwp9U1d4 — NBA (@NBA)June 12, 2025 Three of the five steals came in the first four minutes of the second quarter, a stretch that saw the Pacers rip off an 11-2 run to erase Oklahoma City's early lead and put themselves in position to actually play with the advantage for the first time in this series. "We didn't start the game the way we wanted to," Haliburton said. "I thought our first quarter was poor. But our second unit did a great job of giving us energy to start that second quarter, and we just rode the wave from there." Three of the five also came on inbounds passes, alongtime McConnell specialty, with two leading directly to Pacers scores — which, again, in a game that wound up being decided by just three possessions, were massive plays for Indiana, ratcheting up the intensity on the bench and in the stands to a hysterical degree. "Yeah, I mean, I feel like that's my job, the job of people that come off the bench," McConnell said in the Pacers' locker room after the game. "… It's the NBA Finals. We've got to bring that energy — all of us. Because if we don't, it's doing a disservice to these fans and this organization. We've got to continue to bring energy to the highest level." "When T.J. is playing with that type of energy — I mean, obviously, the crowd loves him," Siakam said. "So it's great for us, because every time he does something good, they go crazy." (Haliburton joked about McConnell's, um,specialconnection with the Indiana fanbase: "I call him the 'Great White Hope.'") Those momentum-swinging steals are also, in turn, massively deflating for Oklahoma City. "Yeah, those plays hurt, especially because they're very controllable," said NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. "They sucked," added Thunder forward Jalen Williams. Mathurin's downhill aggressiveness, McConnell's mix of defensive playmaking and pedal-to-the-metal attacking, Obi Toppin'sexceedinglyathletictwo-waycontributions (which included a couple ofslickpassesin the second quarter) and what Carlisle praised as Ben Sheppard's "absolute, full-capacity effort all the time" in teaming with Andrew Nembhard to guard Gilgeous-Alexander gave the Pacers exactly what they needed on Wednesday to bounce back in a big way from their Game 2 loss, get back on top in this best-of-seven series — and put Oklahoma City in anexceedingly uncomfortable positionheading into Game 4 on Friday. Whether all of the Pacers' reserves can replicate that production remains to be seen. Given the array of options to whom Carlisle can turn, though, Indiana will enter Game 4 feeling pretty good about the chances thatsomebody, and possibly several somebodies, will come through with precisely what the team needs once again. "That's the great thing about the Finals, great thing about basketball," Haliburton said. "When you have a team with this much depth, it can be anybody's night."

Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game'

Thunder vs. Pacers: How Indiana's bench beat OKC in Game 3 of NBA Finals — 'Our second group really won us the game' INDIANAPOLI...
House will vote on Trump's request to cut funding for NPR, PBS and foreign aidNew Foto - House will vote on Trump's request to cut funding for NPR, PBS and foreign aid

WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans are moving to cut about $9.4 billion in spending already approved by Congress as PresidentDonald Trump's administration looks to follow through on work by the Department of Government Efficiency when it was overseen byElon Musk. The package to be voted on Thursday targets foreign aid programs and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides money for National Public Radio and the Public Broadcasting Service, as well as thousands of public radio and television stations around the country. Republicans are characterizing the spending as wasteful and unnecessary, but Democrats say the rescissions are hurting the United States' standing in the world. "Cruelty is the point," Democratic leaderHakeem Jeffriesof New York said of the proposed spending cuts. The Trump administration is employing a tool rarely used in recent years that allows the president totransmit a requestto Congress to cancel previously appropriated funds. That triggers a 45-day clock in which the funds are frozen pending congressional action. If Congress fails to act within that period, then the spending stands. The benefit for the administration of a formal rescissions request is that passage requires only a simple majority in the 100-member Senate instead of the 60 votes usually required to get spending bills through that chamber. So, if they stay united, Republicans will be able to pass the measure without any Democratic votes. The administration is likening the first rescissions package to a test case and says more could be on the way if Congress goes along. Republicans, sensitive to concerns that Trump's sweeping tax and immigration bill wouldincrease future federal deficits, are anxious to demonstrate spending discipline, though the cuts in the package amount to just a sliver of the spending approved by Congress each year. They are betting the cuts prove popular with constituents who align with Trump's "America first" ideology as well as those who view NPR and PBS as having a liberal bias. In all, the package contains 21 proposed rescissions. Approval would claw back about $900 million from $10 billion that Congress has approved for global health programs. That includes canceling $500 million for activities related to infectious diseases and child and maternal health and another $400 million to address the global HIV epidemic. The Trump administration is also looking to cancel $800 million, or a quarter of the amount Congress approved, for a program that provides emergency shelter, water and sanitation, and family reunification for those forced to flee their own country. About 45% of the savings sought by the White House would come from two programs designed to boost the economies, democratic institutions and civil societies in developing countries. The Republican president has also asked lawmakers to rescind nearly $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which represents the full amount it's slated to receive during the next two budget years. About two-thirds of the money gets distributed to more than 1,500 locally owned public radio and television stations. Nearly half of those stations serve rural areas of the country. The association representing local public television stations warns that many of them would be forced to close if the Republican measure passes. Those stations provide emergency alerts, free educational programming and high school sports coverage and highlight hometown heroes. Advocacy groups that serve the world's poorest people are also sounding the alarm and urging lawmakers to vote no. "We are already seeing women, children and families left without food, clean water and critical services after earlier aid cuts, and aid organizations can barely keep up with rising needs," said Abby Maxman, president and CEO of Oxfam America, a poverty-fighting organization. Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said the foreign aid is a tool that prevents conflict and promotes stability but the measure before the House takes that tool away. "These cuts will lead to the deaths of hundreds of thousands, devastating the most vulnerable in the world," McGovern said. "And at a time when China and Russia and Iran are working overtime to challenge American influence." Republicans disparaged the foreign aid spending and sought to link it to programs they said DOGE had uncovered. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, said taxpayer dollars had gone to such things as targeting climate change, promoting pottery classes and strengthening diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Other Republicans cited similar examples they said DOGE had revealed. "Yet, my friends on the other side of the aisle would like you to believe, seriously, that if you don't use your taxpayer dollars to fund this absurd list of projects and thousands of others I didn't even list, that somehow people will die and our global standing in the world will crumble," Roy said. "Well, let's just reject this now."

House will vote on Trump's request to cut funding for NPR, PBS and foreign aid

House will vote on Trump's request to cut funding for NPR, PBS and foreign aid WASHINGTON (AP) — House Republicans are moving to cut abo...

 

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