British and Irish Lions grind out a 21-10 win over Waratahs for a third win in 8 daysNew Foto - British and Irish Lions grind out a 21-10 win over Waratahs for a third win in 8 days

SYDNEY (AP) — The British and Irish Lions had their toughest win of the Australian tour so far, holding off the New South Wales Waratahs 21-10 on Saturday in their third game in eight days. Big back-to-back wins overWestern Forceon Australia's west coast andQueensland Redson the east coast followed a similar patterns where the Lions surged in the second half after arm-wrestles early with the local Super Rugby teams. It was a different rhythm in Sydney, with a third different captain for the Lions and another re-arranged lineup with a view on the three-test tour. Center Huw Jones scored close-range tries in the 12th and 35th minutes to give the Lions a 14-0 lead, although the Waratahs had a try overturned by the Television Match Official for a lineout obstruction in between. The Waratahs scored from the second kick restart, sending the ball to the short side where winger Darby Lancaster beat some forward defenders, was knocked off balance by Hugo Keenan's attempted covering tackle before scrambling the last five meters to score in the left corner. That made it 14-5 at halftime. The Lions hadn't conceded a point in the second half of their opening two wins but that run ended less than two minutes after the break, when Waratahs hooker Ethan Dobbins crashed over after a driving maul from a lineout, with two backs joining the maul. Jack Bowen's conversion attempt hit the near upright, leaving the score at 14-10. The Lions were denied an almost immediate try in response by some desperate cover defense before scrumhalf Alex Mitchell scored in the 55th, darting to the shortside from a ruck after sustained pressure from a scrum penalty and a stream of Waratahs errors. Finn Smith converted to make it 21-10 and it appeared the Lions were starting to get on a roll again, particularly when Mitchell kicked a 50-22 to give the Lions another ideal attacking opportunity. He then threw the last pass for replacement prop Ellis Genge to drive over on the hour, but the ball was lost in the tackle and the Waratahs held firm. The Lions barged over again in the 76th but had a try disallowed for a lineout obstruction in the buildup, and weren't able to cross again in a scrappy, error-strewn encounter. The Lions are now 3-0 since a 28-24loss to Argentinain a warmup in Dublin before the traveling toAustralia for a nine-game tour,which includes three tests against the Wallabies on July 19, 26 and Aug. 2. The British and Irish squad will next play the Canberra-based Brumbies on Wednesday. __ AP rugby:https://apnews.com/hub/rugby

British and Irish Lions grind out a 21-10 win over Waratahs for a third win in 8 days

British and Irish Lions grind out a 21-10 win over Waratahs for a third win in 8 days SYDNEY (AP) — The British and Irish Lions had their to...
Former MLB All-Star pitcher's 10 pieces of advice for sports parentsNew Foto - Former MLB All-Star pitcher's 10 pieces of advice for sports parents

This is Part 3 of a three-part summer series visiting with three former major league All-Stars turned sports dads. They offer sports and life advice about how to make our kids better players, but also how to get the most out of athletic experiences with them. This week:Fulfilling professional dreams with Tom, Dee and Nick Gordon while enjoying the ride as fathers and sons. New York Yankeesfans learned a familiar pitching formula in 2004 and 2005. If their team had the lead, they would see Flash Gordon's biting fastballs and sharp curveballs in the eighth inning, thenMariano Rivera's lethal cutters in the ninth. A victory was virtually sealed. The routine often started much earlier in the day, in the New Jersey suburbs where Gordon lived with his teenaged son. "Daddy, I want to go to the ball field," Dee Gordon would say as he woke up his dad. The veteran relief pitcher, now in his mid-to-late 30s, found a personal revival in what came next. They would go to a nearby diamond at 10:30 or 11 a.m. and get in their work: Father hitting son ground balls, the two talking baseball and soaking up the energy of the interactions he would replicate with similar sessions with another son, Nick. He would rest for a couple hours, feeling laser focused when he headed to Yankee Stadium. "That way of doing things took pressure off me," Tom "Flash" Gordon tells USA TODAY Sports. "I had such a regimen with working with them, where it was taking stress off my mind. And then when it was time for me to get ready to go, I can ease back into it, and then I can go as hard as I can go. They helped me just as much as I helped them." It's the way youth sports can work for parents and kids. Dee and Nick both reached the major leagues, which Flash credits to their determination to climb above their competitors, but also to a path to success his mother and father set him and his siblings along in Avon Park, Florida. Gordon calls himself an ambassador of sorts these days as he coaches and scouts forPerfect Game, a youth baseball and softball platform. "I tried to do the very best I could as a father but also I feel like my job is to pass on information that was given to me," he says. Gordon, 57, spoke with us about Rivera,Bo JacksonandGeorge Brett, but also the wisdom of Tom and Annie Gordon that drives him, and how we can use it to guide our kids' travel sports journeys. He offers 10 tips: When Flash's father, also named Tom, took his son to the ballyard, they gassed up, packed sandwiches and headed up into Alabama, Georgia or South Carolina in a parade of cars. It was a real-life barnstorm. Others came to watch, and the young boy developed an image of what it looked like to be a professional. "I got to see not the actual Negro Leagues — the Grays and the Monarchs and teams like that — but these small teams and these small little towns that wanted to be like them," Flash Gordon says. "It was a Negro league for them, and it was something that they needed." His father never graduated from high school, never came close to the opportunities his son had, but he embraced the life a game had given him. "He never thought he'd be a major league baseball player," Gordon says of his father. "He probably never thought that his son would and then grandsons, but what he did believe in is that he loved baseball so much to where you keep playing it, or play a sport or do something you love, until it's out of you in regards to you don't have the same drive to do it. "And I was really proud of him because he could have easily said, 'Son, I play every Sunday, and I work as hard as I could go, and I was hoping that maybe somebody would see me and like me as a player.' (He was a good pitcher.) And they never did. But he never let that deter him from being our best supporter, our best parent, our best love, and a guy that always wanted to hear how our day went." Late Yankees owner George Steinbrenner once offered advice that Flash continues to use when he's at the Florida car dealerships he and his brothers own:It's important to be here, but it's more important for you to leave something behind. "The knowledge you have, just give that, leave it, because when you're gone, it's not yours to take with you," Flash says. He saw his parents' dedication to not only their jobs, but their roles as parents. Annie was at all of her sons' local games but also carefully sketched out activities for their sister, he says, "to create things in her life that kept her motivated and happy and excited about growing up as a kid in our household." "My mom was a stickler in staying on top of your grades," he says. "Being the oldest, you wanted to make sure that the chores around the house were done. … I don't think I would have made it to the major leagues, I don't think I would have been the person that I've had an opportunity to become without the leadership of my parents. And I see it in my brothers, how they deal with people, respond to people. It's almost like seeing my brothers be just like my mom in a lot of ways; they have that gentle smile before they make a decision." DON'T FEAR FAILURE:A World Series champion's keys to maximizing kids' sports potential As he scowled from the mound, Flash thought he was tough. But he says he has plenty of his mom in him, too. Annie has helped him understand, as he roves around to showcases and events, what constitutes the most elite players. "You're looking at social media and the stuff that they're doing, it's almost like they're already gratified, they're already at that point where, 'Hey, I've shown a scout that I'm going to be great. I can hit home runs, shoot 3-pointers, I can hit a volleyball or whatever on videos and show 'em that I got a chance to be great," Gordon says. "Well, guess what? The coach and the scout have not been around you long enough to see if you're a quality enough of a person to make everybody around you better. "It looks good when you do all these things on video, but now I need to come to your house and ask your parents whether or not you do your chores on time, do you look out for your brothers and sisters, or are you someone that they have to stay on and have to constantly be motivated to do something." Flash's son,Dee Strange-Gordon, was drafted in the fourth round by theLos Angeles Dodgersin 2008 and became a two-time All-Star. But his first sports love was basketball. "All of a sudden, it was like, 'Daddy, could you buy me a bat? Could you buy me a glove?' Yes, yes!' " Flash says. "It's only because they're around it so much. … This game wasn't pushed on them to where they had to play. "Let it be about them and their career and just be more motivated to help them the best way you possibly can, reminding them, for the most part, and Nicholas had a tough time sometimes with this one: Nothing comes easy, son." THE AGONY OF YOUTH SPORTS:Tips from a Little League World Series hero-turned-major-leaguer Before Nick Gordon was drafted in the first round in 2014and wouldplay 338 big-league games, Flash coached him in travel ball. "I moved my son from shortstop to second base. Sometimes I played him at third," Flash says. "He felt like, well, that's the wrong decision to make. However, I have to make the decision best for the entire team, not just for the fact that you're my son. "Be willing to allow your coach to coach your child, and then sit back in the stands and observe and watch the process. … The toughest thing for a parent is when a coach changes your son's position, and maybe you don't think that's the right way. However, you're looking at it from a parent's perspective outside, and he's looking at it [from] the coach's perspective on the ground, boots down." After Flash Gordon wasdrafted by Kansas City in the sixth round in 1986, he reported to the rookie-level Gulf Coast League in Sarasota, Florida. He was a hotshot high schooler who found himself up against anotherKansas City Royalsprospect namedLinton Dyer. Dyer's nickname was "Lightning." "Flash vs. Lightning," another Royals prospect, Bo Jackson, observed, coining Gordon's moniker. Gordon was 20 when he reached the majors. He found out how much he didn't know, when Brett called him over to his locker. "I don't see a routine, son," the future Hall of Famer said. Brett did the same thing every day. He arrived, put on his shorts, and headed off to hit and watch video. "The routine as a parent at home, getting up, those things change sometimes," Flash says, "but when you have a game that's being played at 7 o'clock, it's time for you to get a routine at 3 p.m. and have that routine ready to go and make sure that you capture those goals through that routine until game time. "I really appreciatedMark GubiczaandBret Saberhagen. Those guys had great routines and prepared, they paid attention in the meetings, and it just inspired me to want to try and see if I could do more of that and become that much of a better baseball player." Gordon learned in the majors that teammates wanted to know when they weren't pulling their weight. "Every now and then it's OK to let them know you were not that good today," he says. "Sometimes, as a leader, you have to be reminded that it ain't just about the way you see things. It's about team. We're trying to promote winning. Sometimes players think about things a week down the road when we right now are in this struggle with this other team to beat them three out of four. In the major leagues, guys come there, they all think they're ready to play, and everyone's coming to watch them. I was there. I know what it feels like. But sometimes that criticism puts things back into perspective." Sometimes Flash will look at his phone, and see that it's Bo Jackson calling, and say to himself: "What have I done now?" Bo always gave it to Flash straight if he felt he was just going through the motions. "Hey, you're in the major leagues," Jackson would tell the younger player. "Every day you take nothing for granted here. You go as hard as you can because you never know when that day that you can't play again happens. You get hurt, you may not ever be able to play again. Things don't go well, you may not find that way of being able to progress." Even when our kids reach high school sports, there is no guarantee they will play. Each game, each sliver of playing time within that game, presents an opportunity. Gordon tells kids there are always three things they can control: Your preparation, your attitude and your emotions. "If you do those things," he says, "you make my job easier, and I can help you become a much better baseball player, a much better person." Gordon was in his 15th full major-league season when he got to the Yankees. When he walked into the clubhouse, he'd see Rivera two lockers away. Rivera's routine was to sit there. Nothing, it seemed, could disrupt the guy who would become baseball's all-time saves leader. "We could have a bonfire in the middle of the clubhouse," Gordon says. He was putting himself in that space of mindfulness and focus where pitchers thrive. The practice kept him fresh and motivated, and it was one Gordon realized he liked himself. When Flash came up with the Royals, he had lived with Jackson and his wife, Linda. He was a part of the family to the point where Bo's kids called him their brother. Gordon had just been told by then-Arizona Diamondbacksmanager A.J. Hinch he had been released after what would be his final major-league game in 2009, when he was reminded of that feeling. He walked out of Hinch's office, and each of his teammates was there to hug him. "There's not a coach I've ever come across that's not willing to give you great information to help make you better when you're a good teammate," he says. He couldn't stop crying and yet he was at peace, like he had felt in those days when he and Dee were on the field in New Jersey. "With everything that we have today, technology and the Internet, and everything that's out there, kids' lives start to get overshadowed with them being athletes and other things that they're doing," he says. "Just stay at a place where you're more of a listener than you are someone that's giving advice. You don't have o. Sometimes just watching gives you the best perspective.Just be there for their journey." Read Part I:'You're not getting scouted at 12': Youth sports tips from a LLWS hero Read Part II:World Series champ shares how to maximize high school, college potential Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly.For his past columns, click here. Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him atsborelli@usatoday.com This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tom 'Flash' Gordon has advice for travel sports parents

Former MLB All-Star pitcher's 10 pieces of advice for sports parents

Former MLB All-Star pitcher's 10 pieces of advice for sports parents This is Part 3 of a three-part summer series visiting with three fo...
Social Security Administration praises Trump's agenda bill in widely sent out statementNew Foto - Social Security Administration praises Trump's agenda bill in widely sent out statement

The Social Security Administration this week sent out an email to many Americans celebrating the passage of President Donald Trump's domestic policy bill, and touting the measure's tax relief for seniors, in a move that analysts said strayed from the agency's typically apolitical nature. "This is a historic step forward for America's seniors," said Social Security Commissioner Frank Bisignano in the message. "By significantly reducing the tax burden on benefits, this legislation reaffirms President Trump's promise to protect Social Security and helps ensure that seniors can better enjoy the retirement they've earned." The email — which was also sent to people not yet eligible for Social Security benefits — linked to a blog post on the agency's website noting that nearly 90% of Social Security beneficiaries will no longer pay federal income taxes on their benefits. Although Trump campaigned last year oneliminating taxes on Social Security benefits, congressional Republicans were not able to fulfill that promise in the "One Big Beautiful Bill" because of the rules surrounding reconciliation, the process Senate Republicans used to approve the package without Democratic support. Instead, the legislation will provide senior citizens with a $6,000 boost to their standard deduction from 2025 through 2028. The benefit will start to phase out for individuals with incomes of more than $75,000 and married couples with incomes of more than $150,000. Trump, GOP lawmakers and administration officials have repeatedly claimed the package eliminates taxes on Social Security benefits. But that is not in the legislation, and the enhanced deduction would not be available to everyone who receives monthly payments from the agency — like people who elect to start receiving benefits at 62 but who are not yet 65. In an article released Tuesday titled "No Tax on Social Security is a Reality in the One Big Beautiful Bill," the White House sharedan analysisfrom the Council of Economic Advisers which said 88% of the 58.5 million seniors age 65-plus who receive Social Security would not pay taxes on their benefits. But just over 7 million seniors would have taxable Social Security income that would exceed the enhanced deduction and existing standard and senior deductions, the analysis found. As for protectingSocial Security, the package is expected to reduce the total taxation of benefits by about $30 billion a year, which wouldhasten the insolvencyof the program's retirement trust fund from early 2033 to late 2032, according to an analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. It would accelerate the insolvency of Medicare's hospital insurance trust fund from late 2033 to mid-2032. Plus, many seniors would not benefit from either the enhanced deduction or the elimination of taxation on monthly benefits because their incomes are too low, according tothe Bipartisan Policy Center. Social Security benefits are not included in taxable income from about half of beneficiaries. The statement was out of the ordinary for many Americans because the SSA director is generally expected to be apolitical, though the agency has received criticism for partisan comments in recent months. Martin O'Malley, who served as commissioner during the Biden administration,was found in Mayto have violated the Hatch Act for saying in late 2024 that Trump would "deplete Social Security" if his proposals were enacted. "I certainly can't tell anybody who to vote for, but I can tell you that the proposals that are coming from Donald Trump would quickly deplete Social Security, and we wouldn't be able to pass it on to our kids as our grandparents passed it on to us," O'Malley said during an interview withWPTF Morning Newslast October. Kathleen Romig, a former senior advisor at SSA during the Biden administration, told CNN she's received several emails and text messages from people asking her why they received the email, because they haven't received a similar statement before. "People are like, 'is this real? Is this a scam?' Because it it's not what they signed up for. It doesn't sound like normal government communications, official communications," Romig said. "It sounds like, you know, partisan." Some people took to social media to question and condemn the political nature of the email. "I am not a Social Security recipient but even if I was: Why am I getting an email from SSA celebrating this legislation? How is this an appropriate use of that ostensibly massive database?" readsan X postfrom Amanda Litman, the president and co-founder of Run for Something, which recruits progressive candidates for down-ballot races. Jeff Nesbit, former deputy commissioner for communications at the agency, also criticized the emailin an X post: "Unbelievable. I was a deputy commissioner of the Social Security Administration. Appointed by President Biden. The agency has never issued such a blatant political statement. The fact that Trump and his minion running SSA has done this is unconscionable." Romig warned that the population SSA serves, including seniors and people with disabilities, could be more vulnerable to scammers and phishing attempts. "It's really important that we try to protect them from thinking that legitimate communications are illegitimate, and vice versa," she said. "And I think when we start to blur the line between what is legitimate, official and trustworthy communications from official government channels, then it does open the door for people to not trust what they're getting that is official." SSA did not respond to CNN's request for comment. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Social Security Administration praises Trump’s agenda bill in widely sent out statement

Social Security Administration praises Trump's agenda bill in widely sent out statement The Social Security Administration this week sen...
Trump signs "big, beautiful bill" in July Fourth ceremony at White House

Washington— President Trump brought pomp and circumstance to his signing of the "big, beautiful bill" on Friday, with an Independence Day ceremony at the White House that included a B-2 bomber flyover. Some Republican members of Congress whovoted to passthe legislation attended the event in which the president put his signature on his sweeping domestic policy bill. They stood around Mr. Trump with their thumbs up as he signed the bill. The final bill hasn't appeased all Republicans, but the president and Congress managed to pass it ahead of their self-imposed July Fourth deadline. "What we've done is put everything into one bill," Mr. Trump said. "I liked it because we had so much in there that no matter who you are, there was something in that bill that would make your congressman or your senator or your congresswoman, much more importantly, raise their hand and support it." The president praised Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a South Dakota Republican, and House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, for their work in holding the conference together to get the bill over the finish line. "Those two are a team that is not going to be beat," Mr. Trump said. The presidentwatched coverageof the bill's passage from the White House on Thursday. Mr. Trump took a victory lap during a speech in Iowa Thursday night, calling the first five months of his second term "a declaration of independence from a, really, national decline." White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called the legislation "an encapsulation of all of the policies that the president campaigned on and the American people voted on," and said it's a "victorious day for the American people." Following days of handwringing and negotiations, andHouse Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries breaking the recordfor the longest speech on the House floor, the House passed the legislation Thursday afternoon in a 218-214 vote. Republican Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick and Thomas Massie voted against the legislation, and no Democrats voted for it. GOP leadership and the White House spoke with Republican holdouts for hours to advance the bill early Thursday morning. A senior Trump White House official told reporters on a press call Thursday that the president was "deeply" involved in the process of the bill, and through "late-night phone calls," helped move the bill forward in Congress. Vice President JD Vance was also closely involved, the official said. Mr. Trump also spent part of Friday's event honoring the military members involved in the U.S. strikes against some of Iran's nuclear facilities last month. What's in the "big, beautiful bill"? The current $2,000 child tax credit, which would return to a pre-2017 level of $1,000 in 2026, will permanently increase to $2,200. The legislation includes tougher restrictions onMedicaid, which provides government-sponsored health care for low-income and disabled Americans. The bill imposes work requirements for some able-bodied adults and more frequent eligibility checks. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the bill will result in 11.8 million Americans losing health coverage under Medicaid over the next decade. The bill would allow many tipped workers to deduct up to $25,000 of their tips and overtime from their taxes. That provision expires in 2028. The bill would make changes to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or food stamps,expanding work requirementsand requiring state governments with higher payment error rates to cover some of the program's costs. The legislation also includes more than $46.5 billion for border wall construction and related expenses, $45 billion to expand detention capacity for immigrants in custody and about $30 billion in funding for hiring, training and other resources for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The package also includes an increase to the cap on the state and local tax deduction, raising it from $10,000 to $40,000. After five years, it would return to $10,000.The bill wouldlargely terminatenumerous tax incentives from the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act for clean energy, electric vehicles and energy efficiency programs that benefited consumers. The legislation would raise the debt ceiling by $5 trillion, going beyond the $4 trillion outlined in the initial House-passed bill. Congress faces a deadline to address the debt limit later this summer. Several people missing from Texas summer camp amid deadly flooding, officials say What a new DOJ memo could mean for naturalized U.S. citizens July 4 holiday week expected to set record for travelers

Trump signs "big, beautiful bill" in July Fourth ceremony at White House

Trump signs "big, beautiful bill" in July Fourth ceremony at White House Washington— President Trump brought pomp and circumstance...
Caitlin Clark to miss fifth straight game for Fever vs. SparksNew Foto - Caitlin Clark to miss fifth straight game for Fever vs. Sparks

The Indiana Fever ruled Caitlin Clark out for Saturday's home game against the Los Angeles Sparks due to her lingering left groin injury. Clark will sit out for a fifth straight game and miss her 10th game of the season, including the Commissioner's Cup final Tuesday, when Indiana toppled the league-leading Minnesota Lynx 74-59. The Cup final does not count toward the regular-season standings, but nonetheless, the Fever have won three straight games during Clark's absence. Indiana coach Stephanie White said at the time of Clark's injury that it was "very much a day-to-day thing." After Saturday, the Fever are off again until a home date with the Golden State Valkyries on Wednesday. Clark, 23, sat out five games due to a left quad injury before returning to action against the New York Liberty on June 14. The second-year guard is averaging 18.2 points, 8.9 assists and 5.0 rebounds in nine games (all starts) this season for Indiana Clark won Rookie of the Year honors and made the All-Star and All-WNBA teams in 2024-25 following a record-setting career at Iowa. --Field Level Media

Caitlin Clark to miss fifth straight game for Fever vs. Sparks

Caitlin Clark to miss fifth straight game for Fever vs. Sparks The Indiana Fever ruled Caitlin Clark out for Saturday's home game agains...
Raducanu frustrated by racket tension problem in Wimbledon loss to SabalenkaNew Foto - Raducanu frustrated by racket tension problem in Wimbledon loss to Sabalenka

LONDON (AP) — Emma Raducanu expressed frustration with having to get a couple of her rackets re-strung during herthird-round lossto top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka atWimbledonon Friday. The British player let leads slip in both sets of her 7-6 (6), 6-4 loss at Centre Court with the retractable roof closed. "I felt like the ball was flying. I had all my rackets strung up fresh for the match, and it just felt like it was pinging completely different," Raducanu said. "It could have been a little bit because the roof was on. I sent a couple rackets to be re-strung. "But it takes, like, 20 minutes by the time they turn it over. Still, it was a bit difficult. So I'm frustrated with that part maybe, small details. But I don't think I could have made different choices. I think I should have just executed better." Sabalenka agreed "the balls were flying more," she suspected, because of higher humidity with the roof closed. The three-time Grand Slam champion said her team typically has extra rackets ready. "They always have like two extra rackets with the higher tension and two extra rackets with lower tension. They prepare it. You don't have to wait for another racket," Sabalenka said. Sabalenka said she lost in the 2023 French Open semifinals to Karolina Muchova "because I didn't have racket" with the right tension. "We weren't prepared. I didn't have a right tension. I had to play with a lower tension. I didn't control the ball, didn't feel well," she said. "After that experience," she continued, "we learned it's four extra rackets in my team's bag just in case. You never know. You can wake up and feel great with one tension. Another day you wake up and you don't feel at all. You got to be prepared." ___ AP tennis:https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

Raducanu frustrated by racket tension problem in Wimbledon loss to Sabalenka

Raducanu frustrated by racket tension problem in Wimbledon loss to Sabalenka LONDON (AP) — Emma Raducanu expressed frustration with having t...
Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administrationNew Foto - Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration

Over the past six months, Vice President JD Vance has shown how much of a key player he has become in the Trump administration, serving as the president's most prominent advocate and advancing his agenda. The latest example came this week, when Vance helped push President Donald Trump's massive tax and spending bill through Congress. Vance held a series of meetings with conservative and moderate holdouts and Senate leadership last Saturday to help move the bill forward. A source with direct knowledge stated that Vance played a key role in talking with Senate holdouts throughout the bill before he ended up casting several tie-breaking votes as president of the Senate and move the spending bill along to the House. Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski,who had been critical of the bill's cuts to Medicaid and SNAP -- the food assistance program --met with Vance, where he thanked her for being a team player despite her concerns with the legislation, just before she voted for the bill. During the sprint to push the bill through, Vance was criticized for hissocial postaround concerns of the bill's impact on Medicaid, writing that "the minutiae of the Medicaid policy—is immaterial compared to the ICE money and immigration enforcement provisions." During all this, Vance was making phone calls to Trump and the two were updating each other on their talks with senators ahead of the bill's passage. The vice president attended Wednesday's meeting at the White House between Trump and several holdouts from the House as the president ramped up the pressure to vote for the bill. North Carolina GOP Rep. Greg Murphy, who had told reporters on Wednesday night that he was still undecided because of some of the health care provisions, said Thursday that he ultimately decided to support the package after speaking on the phone to Vance and the president. "I needed assurances," he said. A source close to Vance said that he continued to work the phones ahead of the floor vote on the rule, calling multiple House GOP holdouts to make the administration's case for them to support the bill. However, it's not just on the domestic policy front that Vance is having an impact. He has also been critical in supporting Trump's foreign policy. MORE: Holdouts say Trump promised he'd 'make the bill better' in the future While Trump was weighing the decision to strike Iran's nuclear sites, Vance came to the president's defense after supporters like Tucker Carlson and those in the MAGA base were outspoken against the U.S. getting involved in the conflict between Israel and Iran. "He may decide he needs to take further action to end Iranian enrichment. That decision ultimately belongs to the president," Vance wrote on X. "And of course, people are right to be worried about foreign entanglement after the last 25 years of idiotic foreign policy. But I believe the president has earned some trust on this issue. And having seen this up close and personal, I can assure you that he is only interested in using the American military to accomplish American people's goals. Whatever he does, that is his focus." Vance's comments were a departure from his prior statements that the U.S. should not get entangled in foreign conflicts. A prime example is the vice president's opposition to the U.S. providing more aid to Ukraine. "I gotta be honest with you, I don't really care what happens to Ukraine one way or another," Vance said in February 2022, amid an explosion of bipartisan support for the country following the aftermath of Russia's invasion. Most recently,Vance expressed concernsabout the president's decision to strike the Houthis in Yemen in a Signal group chat with other top administration officials. "I am not sure the president is aware how inconsistent this is with his message on Europe right now," Vance wrote in the chat. "There's a further risk that we see a moderate to severe spike in oil prices. I am willing to support the consensus of the team and keep these concerns to myself. But there is a strong argument for delaying this a month, doing the messaging work on why this matters, seeing where the economy is, etc." In the lead-up to the strikes, Trump was trying to engage the MAGA base with Vance to see what their reaction would be if he ordered the bombing. Prior to the strikes, Trump told reporters on Air Force One while flying back from the G7 summit in Canada that it was possible he could send Vance and special envoy Steve Witkoff to meet with Iranian negotiators. Vance's active role in moving Trump's agenda forward was always part of the plan. In November, following the election,a source close to the vice president told ABC Newsthat Vance had been tasked to ensure that all of the priorities of the Trump administration move forward and would work on any of the issues Trump needed him to further, signaling that the vice president would not be assigned one specific issue to work on, but would be involved in several policy issues. It was also expected that Vance would be Trump's "eyes and ears" in the Senate to ensure that his agenda moves forward, the source also said. It's familiar territory for Vance, who was elected to the Senate in 2022. All this comes as Vance is viewed by some as the MAGA heir apparent to Trump ahead of the 2028 election. At the same time, he is working to raise as much money as possible for Republicans ahead of the 2026 midterms as chair of the Republican National Committee -- the first time a vice president has ever held the role. Joel Goldstein, a vice-presidential scholar and former professor at Saint Louis University Law School, told ABC News that Vance is working in a different timeline compared to his predecessors, as he will serve only one term as vice president under Trump. "Every vice presidency is different and one of the things that is unique about Vance's is that every other vice president, you know, with the possible exception of Harris, entered office with the expectation that the president was going to run for reelection," Goldstein said. "I think he's in a very unique position in that his first term as vice president is his last, and so his presidential ambitions, the time for reckoning comes up, you know, much quicker than is normally the case." Following his tie-breaking votes in the Senate, several Democrats who might be opponents in the 2028 presidential election attempted to make Vance the face of Trump's spending bill. In a post on X, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg called out Vance for casting the tie-breaking vote to allow the bill to move forward. "VP Vance has cast the deciding vote in the Senate to cut Medicaid, take away food assistance, blow up the deficit, and add tax breaks for the wealthiest," Buttigieg wrote. "This bill is unpopular because it is wrong," he continued. California Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsomtold Americans on Xto "bookmark" this moment, writing that "JD Vance is the ultimate reason why 17 million Americans will lose their healthcare." In an interview with NBC News, Trump pointed to Vance and Secretary of State and interim national security adviser Marco Rubio as possible successors, and said, when asked, that he believes his MAGA movement can survive without him. Asked about the president's comments, Vance said that if he does end up running for president, he's "not entitled to it."

Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration

Megabill negotiations show Vance is a key player in the Trump administration Over the past six months, Vice President JD Vance has shown how...

 

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