Senate weighs amendments to foreign aid, public media funding cutsNew Foto - Senate weighs amendments to foreign aid, public media funding cuts

Washington— The Senate kicked off what's expected to be another lengthy vote series Wednesday afternoon as Congress works to deliver on President Trump's request to rescind $9 billion in spending by Friday. The Senatenarrowly advancedthe request late Tuesday. Three Republicans opposed the package and Vice President JD Vance had to cast the two tie-breaking votes to move it forward. The House approved the original $9.4 billion rescissions request last month, but it has faced pushback in the Senate, where some Republicans have opposed slashing foreign aid and public broadcasting funding. Both chambers need to approve the request before it expires at the end of the week, or the funds will have to be spent as lawmakers previously intended. The Senate's decision to consider amendments to the package means the House will need to approve the final Senate version. The rescissions request targets roughly $8 billion for foreign assistance programs, including the United States Agency for International Development, or USAID. The package also includes about $1 billion in cuts for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which supports public radio and television stations, including NPR and PBS. Senate Republicans met with Mr. Trump's budget director, Russell Vought, on Tuesday as GOP leaders worked to get holdouts on board ahead of the procedural votes later in the day. Vought left the meeting saying there would be a substitute amendment that would eliminate $400 million in cuts to an AIDS prevention program, one of the main concerns of Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine. Senate Majority Leader John Thune, a South Dakota Republican, said he hoped the House would accept the "small modification." When asked about the $400 million change, House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, told reporters, "we wanted them to pass it unaltered like we did." "We need to claw back funding, and we'll do as much as we're able," Johnson added. But the change did not satisfy Collins, who voted against advancing the package. Collins was joined by two other Republicans senators: Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. The holdouts said the administration's request lacks details about how the cuts will be implemented. "To carry out our Constitutional responsibility, we should know exactly what programs are affected and the consequences of rescissions," Collins said in a statement Tuesday. In a floor speech ahead of the procedural votes, Murkowski also said Congress should not give up its budget oversight. "I don't want us to go from one reconciliation bill to a rescissions package to another rescissions package to a reconciliation package to a continuing resolution," she said. "We're lawmakers. We should be legislating. What we're getting now is a direction from the White House and being told, 'This is the priority, we want you to execute on it, we'll be back with you with another round.' I don't accept that." Cuts to local radio and television stations, especially in rural areas where they are critical for communicating emergency messages, was another point of contention in the Senate. Republican Sen. Mike Rounds of South Dakota, who had concerns about the cuts, said funding would be reallocated from climate funds to keep stations in tribal areas operating "without interruption." Republican Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina said he would vote for the package, but expected that Congress would later have to try to fix some of the cuts once they determine the impacts. "I suspect we're going to find out there are some things that we're going to regret," he said Wednesday on the Senate floor. "I suspect that when we do we'll have to come back and fix it, similar to what I'm trying to do with the bill I voted against a couple of weeks ago — the so-called big, beautiful bill, that I think we're going to have to go back and work on." Son of man who was violently detained by ICE reacts after release Mike Johnson breaks from Trump, calls on DOJ to release Epstein files Trump claims Epstein conspiracy theory is a hoax started by Democrats

Senate weighs amendments to foreign aid, public media funding cuts

Senate weighs amendments to foreign aid, public media funding cuts Washington— The Senate kicked off what's expected to be another lengt...
Trump team relaxes work-from-home ban for federal employees for religious reasonsNew Foto - Trump team relaxes work-from-home ban for federal employees for religious reasons

By Courtney Rozen WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Federal employees can get permission to work from home or adjust their hours to accommodate religious fasts and prayers, the Trump administration said on Wednesday, after previously demanding that workers report to offices full time. President Donald Trump ordered all federal employees on Inauguration Day to report to their work sites five days per week. The Office of Personnel Management called on agencies to "adopt a generous approach" to allowing employees to work remotely before and during religious holidays, agency director Scott Kupor said. Employees who want to take breaks during the workday while they are fasting should also get permission to work from home, he said. Agencies that opt to deny an employee's request to work remotely for religious reasons must justify it with "evidence of significant operational impact," he said. It is the latest example of the Trump administration relaxing its policy that employees with desk jobs must report to the office full time. Trump railed against remote work arrangements for federal employees on the campaign trail, threatening after the election to "dismiss" staff that didn't report to the office. The Office of Personnel Management later exempted military spouses. Elon Musk, the Tesla CEO who had led Trump's cost-cutting effort, predicted in November that revoking "the COVID-era privilege of staying home" would trigger "a wave of voluntary terminations that we welcome." More than 1 million federal employees—almost half of the federal civilian workforce—were eligible to work remotely at least part of the time as of May 2024, according to a Biden administration report. Around 10% of that workforce was entirely remote. (Reporting by Courtney Rozen; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Trump team relaxes work-from-home ban for federal employees for religious reasons

Trump team relaxes work-from-home ban for federal employees for religious reasons By Courtney Rozen WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Federal employees ...
Mountain West Conference pauses expansion amid legal dispute with Pac-12New Foto - Mountain West Conference pauses expansion amid legal dispute with Pac-12

LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Mountain West Conference, in the process of going through a major membership transition, will "pause" adding new schools, Commissioner Gloria Nevarez said Wednesday at the conference's football media days. The conference willadd Grand Canyonin all sports except football beginning this year. Hawaii, which plays football in the Mountain West, will join as a full member in 2026, as will Texas-El Paso. Northern Illinois will play only football in the Mountain West and UC Davis will be a non-football member. Five schools will leave the Mountain West for the Pac-12 Conference next year — Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, San Diego State and Utah State. Both conferences are in a legal dispute about poaching fees and areheaded back to courtafter failing to reach an agreement. "We're going to pause right now as far as additional membership," Nevarez said at her annual football news conference. "Never say never, but we really want to get through our media rights negotiation, take a deep breath and then we'll readdress the issue." Nevarez said she hoped to announce a new media deal soon. She also touched on several other topics: — The Mountain West is paying for any costs associated with adding Grand Canyon a year early. — Conference headquarters will relocate from Colorado Springs, Colorado, to Las Vegas in July 2026. The Mountain West has been in Colorado Springs since its inception in 1999. — Nevarez said the Mountain West did not support conferences receiving more than one automatic berth to the College Football Playoff. The Big Ten Conference prefers such a format buthas lost support from the Southeastern Conferencefor that type of model. ___ AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Mountain West Conference pauses expansion amid legal dispute with Pac-12

Mountain West Conference pauses expansion amid legal dispute with Pac-12 LAS VEGAS (AP) — The Mountain West Conference, in the process of go...
Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB careerNew Foto - Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career

(Content warning: This story contains alleged depictions of domestic violence.) Former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Julio Uríascompleted his domestic-violence suspensionand will be reinstated by Major League Baseball on Thursday. Once he is officially eligible to play again, Urías will lookto continue his MLB career, agent Scott Boras told Bill Shaikin of the Los Angeles Times. "He still has every intention to continue his career," Boras said Monday. "He's getting in shape. Obviously, he'll have options that are open to him." Boras declined to get into specifics on the options or possible deals Urías has on the table. It's believed multiple teams have checked in on Urías, per Shaikin. Any team who signs Urías will have to wait some time before he's ready to pitch in games. Urías reportedly needs to get in shape. It's unclear if he could do that in time to return to the mound this season or if he would need the entire offseason to get back into baseball shape. Urías, 28, hasn't pitched in the majors since the 2023 MLB season. He posted a 4.60 ERA over 117 1/3 innings before he was suspended under the league's domestic-violence policy that September. It marked the second time in his career Urías was suspended by the league under that policy. Urías received a 20-game suspension in 2019 after he was arrested and charged with domestic battery. Urías served that suspension and returned to the team for the 2020 season. He was on the mound when the Dodgers won the World Series later that year, throwing a scoreless 2 1/3 innings to close out the contest. He performed well for the team over the next two seasons, posting a 2.57 ERA over 360 2/3 innings and earning down-ballot Cy Young award votes in 2021 and 2022. Urías was in the midst of an injury-riddled year when he received his second suspension from MLB in 2023. Urías was arrested on suspicion of felony domestic violence after allegedly getting into a physical altercation with his wife outside BMO Stadium in Los Angeles. That charge was eventually changed to five misdemeanors. Urías pleaded no contest to one of those charges. The other four were dropped. In 2024,video emergedof the 2023 incident, which showed Urías shove his wife into a fence. Urías appeared to take a swing at his wife as the two were being separated by witnesses. Urías' contract ended after the 2023 season and he went unsigned in 2024 while the league continued to investigate the situation. In March, the league announced Urías would be suspended through the 2025 MLB All-Star break, paving the way for his expected reinstatement Thursday.

Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career

Former Dodgers pitcher Julio Urías to be reinstated from domestic-violence suspension, wants to continue MLB career (Content warning: This s...
Barack Obama Jokes Michelle 'Took Me Back' as Duo Makes Fun of 'Rumor Mill' (Exclusive)New Foto - Barack Obama Jokes Michelle 'Took Me Back' as Duo Makes Fun of 'Rumor Mill' (Exclusive)

Barack Obama joined wife Michelle Obama for the latest episode of herIMOpodcast, where the two joked about the rumors surrounding their marriage Michelle's co-host and brother Craig Robinson quipped, "Wait, you guys like each other?" Barack, meanwhile, joked that their relationship had been "touch and go for a while" PresidentBarack Obamamade a long-awaited appearance onMichelle Obama's podcast this week, where the two wasted no time poking fun at the speculation about their relationship. Michelle and her co-host and brother,Craig Robinson, opened the show by teasing the "very, very,veryspecial" guest set to join them that day. "This is the episode that everyone's been waiting for with bated breath," Craig announced, "because we have my brother-in-law, your husband, the former president of the United States." Michelle added, "He made time in his busy schedule to come on. We are honored." As soon as Barack, 63, and Michelle, 61, shared a welcoming embrace, the teasing began. Michelle Obama/YouTube "Wait, you guys like each other?" Craig joked, as Michelle replied, "That's the rumor mill." While he took his seat, Barack quipped, "She took me back! It was touch and go for a while." Michelle teased, "Now, don't you start," before Craig told the couple, "It's so nice to have you both in the same room." With a laugh, Michelle told him, "I know, because when we aren't, folks think we're divorced." Barack and Michelle are no strangers to gossip about their personal lives, with split rumors emerging as they made solo outings and worked on individual projects this year. Even afamily phototo celebrate their daughter Sasha's 24th birthday in June wasn't enough to convince some that the couple was very much together. Barack Obama / Instagram In a May interview onThe Diary of a CEO with Steven Bartlettpodcast, Michelle confronted some of the speculation head-on. "The beauty of my husband and our partnership is that neither one of us was really ever gonna quit at it, 'cause that's not who we are," she said. "And I know that about him. He knows that about me." As for her decisions not to attend certain public events after leaving the White House — specifically, herdecision to skipPresidentDonald Trump's January inauguration — Michelle said that she's finally starting to feel she has "permission to do what I want to do." "I think at 61, I'm finally owning my wisdom," she said. "I think it takes women until we're about 60 to be like, 'I think I know a thing or two.' " On herIMOpodcast in April,Michelle shared more about her decisionto skip the inauguration. "People couldn't believe that I was saying no for any other reason, they had to assume that my marriage was falling apart," she said. "It took everything in my power to not do the thing that was perceived as right, but do the things that was right for me, that was a hard thing for me to do." On today'sIMOepisode, Michelle and Barack discussed the challenges facing men and boys, and why they both think it could have beendifficult to have a sonafter raising Sasha and her older sister, Malia, 27. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The former president admitted, "I think I might've been more judgmental, harder, and I would've tried to — I'd like to think I would have been more self-aware enough to combat that, but I just think father-son relationships, for me, particularly if I don't have a dad around to show it to me, might've been more difficult." Barack was raised by his mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, after she and his father, Barack H. Obama, Sr., divorced when he was 2 years old. Read the original article onPeople

Barack Obama Jokes Michelle 'Took Me Back' as Duo Makes Fun of 'Rumor Mill' (Exclusive)

Barack Obama Jokes Michelle 'Took Me Back' as Duo Makes Fun of 'Rumor Mill' (Exclusive) Barack Obama joined wife Michelle Ob...
Trump, White House race to stem Epstein conspiracy falloutNew Foto - Trump, White House race to stem Epstein conspiracy fallout

By Nandita Bose WASHINGTON (Reuters) -For years, President Donald Trump and his Republican allies benefited from conspiracy theories that fueled the conservative MAGA movement and targeted his political enemies. Now the persisting furor over files related to accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein has forced Trump into an unfamiliar role: trying to shut a conspiracy theory down. Epstein, a wealthy financier and convicted sex offender, was facing federal charges of sex-trafficking minors when he died by suicide in jail in 2019. He had pleaded not guilty, and the case was dismissed after his death. The saga burst back into the news last week after the Trump administration reversed course on its pledge to release documents it had suggested would reveal major revelations about Epstein and his alleged clientele. That reversal has enraged some of Trump's most loyal followers. In an effort to contain the fallout, Trump and White House officials are weighing a range of options including unsealing new documents, appointing a special prosecutor and drafting executive actions on issues such as pedophilia, according to two White House sources with knowledge of the matter. Trump and senior aides have also reached out to key MAGA-aligned influencers, urging them to dial down their criticism of the administration's handling of the Epstein investigation and shift focus to broader priorities for the America First movement, one source said. The backlash over the Epstein case has laid bare tensions inside Trump's coalition and is testing one of Trump's most enduring political strengths: his ability to command loyalty and control the narrative across the right. The outcry comes amid discontent among parts of Trump's base over the U.S. strikes on Iran, continued involvement in Ukraine and any hint of backsliding on the administration's hardline immigration promises. The two sources said the intra-party friction was damaging to the coalition and that the White House was actively trying to restore unity, though they did not expect the Epstein controversy to dent Trump's core support. Many conservative influencers and hard-right media figures remain unconvinced by a Justice Department memo last week that concluded there was "no incriminating client list" or any evidence that Epstein may have blackmailed prominent people. The review also confirmed prior findings by the FBI that concluded that Epstein killed himself in his jail cell while awaiting trial, and that his death was not the result of a criminal act such as murder. Trump knew Epstein socially in the 1990s and early 2000s. During the 2021 trial of Epstein's associate Ghislaine Maxwell, the financier's longtime pilot, Lawrence Visoski, testified that Trump flew on Epstein's private plane multiple times. Trump has denied ever being on the plane and has not been accused of any wrongdoing. That history now complicates Trump's response, as he works to reassure a base steeped in long-running suspicions about Epstein and his connection to influential figures. TRUMP BACKS BONDI Trump has defended Attorney General Pam Bondi against calls for her firing by some MAGA personalities. He has urged his supporters to move on from the Epstein saga.        "I don't understand why the Jeffrey Epstein case is of interest to anybody," Trump told reporters on Tuesday. "It's pretty boring stuff. It's sordid, but it's boring, and I don't understand why it keeps going." Both White House sources said there were mistakes in how information about the Epstein files was shared with pro-Trump influencers, especially by Bondi, who had previously implied that a list of Epstein's clients existed. The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment, and Bondi did not answer questions on Tuesday about Trump's comments on the Epstein files at a press conference. When asked if she expected to keep her job, she said, "I am going to be here for as long as the president wants me here - and I believe he's made that crystal clear." In a statement on Tuesday, the White House said Trump's law-and-order team remains focused on "Making America Safe Again" and "restoring the integrity of our criminal justice system." While some prominent voices outside the administration are falling back in line, others are not. Charlie Kirk, a key MAGA influencer who had amplified doubts about the Epstein probe, abruptly reversed course after a call with Trump, one of the sources said. On Monday, Kirk posted on social-media platform X: "I'm done talking about Epstein. I'm gonna trust my friends in the government." Trump's call for critics to back off is not landing everywhere. Podcast hosts including Joe Rogan, Theo Von and Tim Dillon, whose large audiences are not necessarily pro-Trump but broadly anti-establishment and helped propel his election victory, are unlikely to let up, according to Angelo Carusone, president of the progressive nonprofit watchdog group Media Matters for America. "Trump seems very disconnected from the zeitgeist that put him into power in the first place," Carusone said. Some of Trump's staunchest political allies also are keeping the pressure on. House Republicans, including Speaker Mike Johnson, called on Tuesday for the Justice Department to release more Epstein documents. Representative Lauren Boebert, a hardline MAGA supporter, made her own demand on X: "We deserve the truth about the Epstein files. I'm ready for a Special Counsel to handle this." (Reporting by Nandita Bose in WashingtonAdditional reporting by Sarah N. LynchEditing by Colleen Jenkins and Matthew Lewis)

Trump, White House race to stem Epstein conspiracy fallout

Trump, White House race to stem Epstein conspiracy fallout By Nandita Bose WASHINGTON (Reuters) -For years, President Donald Trump and his R...
Golf's major season ends too soonNew Foto - Golf's major season ends too soon

There's nothing quite like the Open Championship — or the British Open, if you're America-centric — on the golf calendar. It's a weeklong exercise in coffee golf, awakening in the small hours of the morning (or staying up late, if you're on the West Coast) to watch the world's best fight through howling wind, sideways rain and brown British food while you sprawl out on the couch half-awake. It's glorious, and the only downside is that it marks the end of major-championship golf for almost nine full months. One hundred and one days. That's it. That's how long it will be from the moment that Jack Nicklaus hit his ceremonial tee shot to begin this year's Masters to the moment the final putt drops on Sunday to herald the end of the Open Championship. One hundred and one days. Fourteen weeks. Barely three months. Doesn't seem quite right, does it? Golf's major season is a flurry of some of the finest drama and narrative the sports world can conjure — the majesty of the Masters, the chaos of the PGA Championship, the brawn of the U.S. Open, the elegance of the Open Championship — that vanishes just as you've settled into its rhythms. In baseball, 101 days from Opening Day doesn't even get you to the All-Star break. In the NFL, the 101st day after this year's initial regular-season game falls the day before Week 15. It's not a perfect juxtaposition, since golf does have other events outside of the majors, of course. The Ryder Cup every two years, the Olympics every four years, the Players and FedEx Cup playoffs every year — each has its merits, each is memorable in its own way, but none of them quite match up to the majors on the scale of historic weight. Golf's most apples-to-apples comparison is with tennis, which — coincidentally enough — also has four majors: Wimbledon, plus the Australian, French and U.S. Opens. (The golf equivalents: Australian Open = PGA Championship, French Open = Open Championship, Wimbledon = The Masters, U.S. Open = U.S. Open.) However, unlike golf, tennis' Grand Slam events stretch over eight months, from mid-January to September. The majors' compact schedule means it's difficult to appreciate the historical resonance of a career-defining win. Players don't get a Super Bowl champion parade; they get on a plane and head to their next tournament. Days after he won the U.S. Open, J.J. Spaun played in the Travelers Championship. (He finished T14.) Rory McIlroy took a couple weeks off but still seems shellshocked in the wake of his seismic Masters win. In the months since his PGA win, Scottie Scheffler has … placed in the top seven of every tournament he's played, winning one. OK, bad example there. The point is, golf's calendar doesn't allow much of a slow build of anticipation. It's the sports equivalent of bingeing all episodes of a TV show at once … and then waiting through a long, cold winter for the next go-round. The tennis model would be nice, allowing for golf to extend its major season from winter all the way through late summer, from an American perspective. Nice, but also unrealistic. The problem is, there's not really much of an option to alter the golf calendar without doing something truly drastic — or, alternately, pushing around the PGA Championship. Granted, it's been done before; over the course of its 107 contests, the PGA has been played inninedifferent months — February, May, June, July, August, September, October, November and December. But thanks to football's massive footprint and block-out-the-sun shadow, those last four months are off the table. The Masters owns April. The U.S. and British Opens have claimed June and July. The PGA moved from August back in 2019 because May is far more hospitable for far more courses than August, and because the PGA got tired of relocating for the Olympics every few years. A move back to February, combined with something exotic — match play, perhaps? — is interesting to contemplate, but the longest of long shots to consider. Alternately, the PGA could move back to August and potentially go international … but again, that requires the PGA to shoulder the burden of extending golf's calendar while the other three majors sit comfortably ensconced in their long-claimed months. So the reality is, now and for the foreseeable future, we have just four days of major championship golf remaining in the season. Yes, the Ryder Cup and the playoffs await, but there's just one more chance this year for a player to claim, or cement, his legacy. Put the coffee on, you won't want to miss this one … because it's a long time until the azaleas bloom again.

Golf's major season ends too soon

Golf's major season ends too soon There's nothing quite like the Open Championship — or the British Open, if you're America-cent...

 

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