Tag Archives: Donald Trump

Republicans plan attack ads on Democrats in Trump districts who opposed GOP agenda bill

The House Republicans’ campaign arm is focusing a new advertising campaign on Democrats from politically risky seats who voted against the GOP’s sweeping effort to cut taxes and pass Medicaid work requirements, setting the stage for what may prove to be one of the biggest political messaging clashes of next year’s midterms. 

Republicans in Washington are attempting to use their control of Congress and the White House to put in place major conservative agenda items sought by President Donald Trump and his allies through one massive piece of legislation, titled the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” The House GOP’s narrow passage of Trump’s agenda earlier this week has set off a struggle between Republicans and Democrats to sway voters about the impact of the bill that is widely expected to play a large role in the 2026 midterm elections, where control of the House will be decided. 

In a statement about the advertising campaign, National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Mike Marinella said the campaign arm “will make sure voters don’t forget how [House Democrats] betrayed working families.” 

The round of digital advertisements places a particular emphasis on the tax portion of the Trump agenda bill, which continues key parts of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that was the centerpiece of his first term in office. Plans show the ads will target  25 House Democrats and make the argument that by opposing this week’s bill, the Democrats voted “for the largest U.S. tax hike in generations.” Of those 25 districts, 13 are seats where a Democrat won the House contest while Trump carried the district in the presidential race. 

Republicans’ best chance at padding their narrow majority next year could come in places that had some of the closest Congressional races in the entire country during the 2024 presidential election, including a California seat where the Democratic candidate ousted a Republican incumbent by less than 200 votes. Other areas closely watched by the GOP that are also the subject of the latest ad campaign include two Democrat-held seats in the red state of Ohio, districts Trump won in the battleground states of North Carolina and Michigan, as well as seats that could prove to be competitive in New York, New Jersey and New Mexico. 

Yet while many House Republicans in Washington are cheering the legislation, Democrats see ample political liabilities for their opponents. Democratic leaders view the House as the party’s best chance at quickly winning back power in Washington during Trump’s presidency, given the perils an incumbent president’s party routinely faces in a midterm election and the small number of seats it would likely take to flip control of the chamber. 

The GOP’s targeting of Medicaid in particular has quickly been seized on by the left as a major campaign issue, as Democrats charge the Republican agenda’s changes imperil healthcare for millions of people

“America cannot afford the Republican tax scam. Now that vulnerable Republicans are on the record voting for it, this betrayal of the American people will cost them their jobs in the midterms and Republicans the House Majority come 2026,” Washington Rep. Suzan DelBene, the chair of the House Democratic campaign arm, said in a statement earlier this week. 

It remains to be seen however what kind of bill can eventually make it to Mr. Trump’s desk, given the changes the GOP-led Senate may make once it gets its hands on the legislation. 

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Harvard Suing Trump over Ban on Foreign Student Enrollments

Harvard is challenging the Trump administration’s decision to prohibit the university from enrolling foreign students, initiating legal action while casting itself as an innocent victim for defying the White House’s demands it end antisemitism on campus and coordination with Chinese Communist Party.

AP reports in a lawsuit filed Friday in federal court in Boston, Harvard said the government’s action violates the First Amendment and will have an “immediate and devastating effect for Harvard and more than 7,000 visa holders.”

“With the stroke of a pen, the government has sought to erase a quarter of Harvard’s student body, international students who contribute significantly to the University and its mission,” Harvard said in its suit, per the AP report. “Without its international students, Harvard is not Harvard.”

The world’s richest university said it plans to file for a temporary restraining order to block the Department of Homeland Security from carrying out the move.

WATCH — Harvard Yard Invaded by Anti-Israel Encampment, “Intifada Revolution”

As Breitbart News reported, the Ivy League school’s ability to welcome foreign students has been stopped as the university resists President Donald Trump’s popular and constitutionally mandated policy of ending racial favoritism in government-funded schools.

“This administration is holding Harvard accountable for fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus,” said a statement from Kristi Noem, Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Harvard enrolls almost 6,800 foreign students at its campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Most are graduate students and they come from more than 100 countries.

Follow Simon Kent on Twitter: or e-mail to: skent@breitbart.com



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Trump’s Harvard international student ban could derail Belgium’s Princess Elisabeth’s studies

Brussels — Belgium’s Royal Palace said Friday that Princess Elisabeth, who is first in line to the throne, is waiting to find out whether she can return to Harvard for her second year after President Trump announced a ban on foreign students at the university.

The Trump administration on Thursday revoked Harvard University’s ability to enroll international students in its escalating battle with the Ivy League school, saying thousands of students must transfer to other schools or leave the country. Harvard filed a lawsuit Friday against the Trump administration, arguing that its action violates the First Amendment and will have an “immediate and devastating effect for Harvard and more than 7,000 visa holders.”

The school said Friday that it would file for a temporary restraining order to block the Department of Homeland Security from carrying out the Trump administration’s move.

“We are looking into the situation, to see what kind of impact this decision might have on the princess, or not. It’s too early to say right now,” said the Belgian palace’s communications head, Xavier Baert.

Baert said that Princess Elisabeth, 23, had completed her first year of a graduate school program at Harvard and would spend the summer back in Belgium. “And we’ll have to see what happens next year,” he said.

Princess Elisabeth arrives for a traditional Christmas concert, Dec. 18, 2024, in Brussels, Belgium.

Philip Reynaers/Photonews/Getty


The princess is the first of four children born to King Philippe and Queen Mathilde, and has been studying for a Master in Public Policy. Last year, she obtained a degree in history and politics at Lincoln College at Oxford in the U.K.

Harvard enrolls almost 6,800 foreign students at its campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, accounting for more than a quarter of its student body. Most are graduate students, coming from more than 100 countries.

About 1,000 of Harvard’s foreign students come from China, and the Trump administration has specifically accused Harvard of “fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus.”

China’s Foreign Ministry said Friday that the ban on Harvard accepting international students “by the U.S. side will only damage its own image and international credibility,” as a university in Hong Kong publicly invited foreign students who could be denied access to the Ivy League school to join its student body instead.

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Trump says large Russia-Ukraine prisoner swap

Washington — President Trump said Friday that Russia and Ukraine had carried out a large exchange of prisoners from their more than three-year war, while a Ukrainian official said the swap was ongoing but not yet complete. Moscow did not immediately confirm the exchange was underway but it appeared to be one of the few signs of any progress in international efforts to halt the fighting.

“A major prisoners swap was just completed between Russia and Ukraine,” Mr. Trump said on his Truth Social platform. He said it would “go into effect shortly,” although it was not clear what that meant.

A senior Ukrainian official familiar with the details of the swap told The Associated Press that the exchange was ongoing Friday morning but had not finished. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Both Russian and Ukrainian media outlets reported in recent days that a swap was agreed for about 1,000 prisoners to be handed over by each side but no specifics were confirmed by either government on Friday.

Shamsail Saraliev, a senior Russian lawmaker and representative of the parliamentary coordination group on military operations, told the country’s RBC news agency on Thursday that it would be difficult to conduct a prisoner exchange with Ukraine involving as many as 2,000 prisoners in total in just one day, saying the process would likely be carried out over several days.    

“This could lead to something big???” Mr. Trump said in his post on Friday, apparently referring to international diplomatic efforts to stop the fighting. White House and National Security Council officials did not immediately respond to requests for further details.

A woman reacts as she visits the grave of her relative, a Ukrainian soldier, as Ukrainians mark the national Day of Heroes, amid Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, at the Lychakiv cemetery in Lviv, Ukraine, May 23, 2025.

Pavlo Palamarchuk/REUTERS


Speaking Friday at the Kremlin, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there had been “no decisions or agreements yet on the next venue for negotiations between Russia and Ukraine.”

The ongoing exchange was agreed last week in the first direct Russia-Ukraine peace talks since the early weeks of Moscow’s 2022 invasion of its neighbor. That meeting in Turkey lasted just two hours and brought no breakthrough in international diplomatic efforts to stop the fighting.

Still, the fact that the two sides had even sat down face-to-face on May 15 was a significant development in itself, even though Russian President Vladimir Putin declined to accept his Ukrainian counterpart, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s, challenge to show up for the negotiations in person. 

Several days later, Mr. Trump held a two-hour phone call with Putin, the tone and spirit of which he described as “excellent.” He said Russia and Ukraine would “immediately start negotiations toward a ceasefire,” and he then held a separate call with Zelenskyy.

Mr. Trump said repeatedly before taking office for his second term that he could bring the Russia-Ukraine war to an end within 24 hours.

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China says Trump’s crackdown on Harvard “will only damage” U.S.

The Chinese government said Friday that the Trump administration’s move to ban international students from Harvard would harm America’s international standing, and one university in Hong Kong looked to capitalize on the uncertainty by promising to take them in. Chinese students make up a large part of Harvard University’s international student population. The university enrolled 6,703 international students across all of its schools in 2024, according to the school’s data, or about a quarter of the overall student body, with 1,203 of those coming from China.

The Trump administration’s move, announced Thursday, was a hot topic on Chinese social media. State broadcaster CCTV questioned whether the U.S. would remain a top destination for foreign students, noting that Harvard was already suing the U.S. government in court.

“But with the long litigation period, thousands of international students may have trouble waiting,” the CCTV commentary said. It went on to say that it becomes necessary for international students to consider other options “when policy uncertainty becomes the norm.”

People are seen on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, April 22, 2025.

Kyle Mazza/Anadolu/Getty


Educational cooperation with the U.S. is mutually beneficial and China opposes its politicization, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a daily briefing in Beijing.

“The relevant actions by the U.S. side will only damage its own image and international credibility,” she said.

She added that China would firmly protect the rights and interests of Chinese students and scholars abroad but she didn’t offer any details on how it would do so in this situation.

U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem accused Harvard this week of “fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party on its campus.”

She said the administration’s action against the renowned university would “serve as a warning” to other colleges.

Last month, CBS Boston reported that Noem had demanded detailed records on the purported “illegal and violent activities” of Harvard’s foreign student visa holders.

“It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from their higher tuition payments to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments,” Noem said in a statement. “Harvard had plenty of opportunity to do the right thing. It refused.”

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson said Harvard has become “a hotbed of anti-American, anti-Semitic, pro-terrorist agitators.”

“They have repeatedly failed to take action to address the widespread problems negatively impacting American students and now they must face the consequences of their actions,” Jackson said in the statement.

Harvard has called the administration’s move unlawful.

“We are fully committed to maintaining Harvard’s ability to host international students and scholars, who hail from more than 140 countries and enrich the University — and this nation — immeasurably. We are working quickly to provide guidance and support to members of our community,” a spokesperson for the university said in a statement Thursday. “This retaliatory action threatens serious harm to the Harvard community and our country, and undermines Harvard’s academic and research mission.”

CBS Boston reported that panic was quickly setting in for some of Harvard’s incoming foreign students, who have been left scrambling to find other university options and make new plans ahead of the autumn term. Already, at least one Chinese university is publicly looking to help meet their needs.

The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology extended an open invitation to international students already at Harvard and those who have been admitted. The institution posted a news release saying it would provide unconditional offers, streamlined admission procedures and academic support to facilitate a seamless transition.

Some people in China joked online about having the university open a branch in the northeastern Chinese city of Harbin, whose name shares the same character as Harvard’s name in Chinese.

The issue of Chinese students studying overseas has long been a point of tension in the relationship with the United States. During Mr. Trump’s first term, China’s Ministry of Education warned students about rising rejections rates and shorter terms for visas in the U.S.

Last year, the Chinese foreign ministry protested that a number of Chinese students had been interrogated and sent home upon arrival at U.S. airports.

China’s state media outlets have long played up gun violence in the U.S. and portrayed America as a dangerous place. Some Chinese students are opting to study in the U.K. or other countries rather than the U.S.

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Trump touts record-breaking military recruitment. But numbers were rising before his reelection

Ahead of Memorial Day, President Trump has repeatedly taken credit for an upswing in military recruitment, claiming almost no one wanted to join the military before news of his reelection.

“After years of military recruiting shortfalls, enlistments in the U.S. armed forces are now the highest in 30 years because there is such an incredible spirit in the United States of America,” the president said last week in Riyadh.

In reality, military records show enlistments began rebounding from a pandemic slump long before Election Day. While numbers have continued to rise under Mr. Trump, experts say the so-called “Trump Bump”—a term used by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth— is more likely the result of recruitment reforms introduced during former President Joe Biden’s term.

Mr. Trump has also exaggerated the scale of the recovery, claiming enlistments have hit modern highs. But public data shows the military is still attracting fewer recruits than it did earlier this decade. 

Trump’s misleading claim that military recruitment reached 30-year records

Asked for comment on the source of the defense secretary and president’s claims, a White House official and the Defense Department both pointed to a statement by chief Pentagon spokesperson and senior adviser Sean Parnell. “Since Nov. 5, 2024, the U.S. military has seen the highest recruiting percentage of mission achieved in 30 years,” Parnell said in April.

Publicly available reports from the Defense Department confirm recruiters are currently meeting their goals for the year, but its monthly reports — only published online since 2016 — also show the services frequently adjust annual targets, making historical comparisons less meaningful.

For example, after falling short of their goals in fiscal years 2022 and 2023 amid a tight job market, the Army cut its goal from 65,000 to 55,000 active-duty soldiers for the fiscal year 2024. After meeting that benchmark, it’s aiming for 61,000 recruits this year. These shifting goal posts complicate claims of record performance. 

When measured by total recruits — the metric Mr. Trump appeared to explicitly reference — active military enlistments have risen year over year but remain below recent peaks.

In March, the most recent month available, around 13,000 new people enlisted, an increase of nearly 50% over the prior year, but below the 15,000 recorded in March 2018, during Mr. Trump’s first term. The figure includes all branches of the military except for the Coast Guard, which falls under the Department of Homeland Security. 

The highest monthly figure under Mr. Trump second term so far was in January—his inauguration month—when 15,597 recruits received basic training dates. That still trails  the 16,800 recorded in January 2018 and 20,000 in August 2024 under Biden. 

Recruitment could surpass pre-pandemic levels by the end of fiscal 2025 in September, but it’s too early to tell.

And despite recent gains, enlistments remain well below levels achieved three decades ago. In 1990, over 220,000 enlisted in the active military. Those numbers declined after the end of the Cold War and haven’t returned to that level, according to historic Defense Department data.  

Trump’s false claim that recruitment fell to record lows during President Biden’s last year 

Mr. Trump also claimed military enlistments fell to record lows during Biden’s last year in office.

“Just about a year ago, it was a big story, front page of every paper all over the world, that nobody wanted to enlist in our military,” Mr. Trump said.

That’s false. Defense data shows military recruitment began to recover after COVID-era declines in fiscal year 2023 and continued to grow in 2024. That year, 146,473 people signed active-duty contracts—about 12,000 more than the previous year. 

Mr. Trump has further suggested enlistment was at a record low right before news of his election. In fact, 10,993 people enlisted in October 2024, the last full month before Election Day, a 60% increase over the same month in 2023.

Experts say recruitment reforms explain why recruitment has ticked up, despite longterm challenges

Experts who study military enlistment say the continued improvements have more to do with changes in recruitment strategy and compensation than the change in commander-in-chief.

Katherine Kuzminski of the Center for a New American Security credits Biden-era programs like the Army’s Future Soldier Prep Course launched in 2022 and the Navy’s Future Sailor Prep Course launched in 2023 for helping candidates struggling with enlistment requirements. In 2024, about 25% of the Army’s enlistments came through a prep course.

“It’s harder to convince someone to be interested in military service than it is to train them to a standard,” Kuzminski said.

Defense statistics show over 70% of American youths don’t meet qualifications for military service because of rising rates of obesity, drug use, mental health issues, and difficulties meeting educational standards. 

Polls show interest in service has also declined in the last decade, and defense representatives have cited flagging trust in institutions, a shrinking population of veterans who serve as models of service, and the number of job options in the private sector, depending on the strength of the economy. 

To better compete with private sector offers, Congress approved a 14.5% pay increase for junior enlisted troops last December that took effect this year. 

“It would benefit the DoD to publicly also recognize that they’ve made quite a few adjustments to the recruiting enterprise instead of the perception that’s coming out that it’s driven solely by partisan politics,” Kuzminski said, “Because I don’t think that for most American youth that’s the driving factor for their joining the military.” 

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Republicans aim to punish states that insure unauthorized immigrants

President Trump’s signature budget legislation would punish 14 states that offer health coverage to people in the U.S. without authorization.

The states, most of them Democratic-led, provide insurance to some low-income immigrants — often children — regardless of their legal status. Advocates argue the policy is both humane and ultimately cost-saving.

But the federal legislation, which Republicans have titled the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” would slash federal Medicaid reimbursements to those states by billions of dollars a year in total unless they roll back the benefits.

The bill narrowly passed the House on Thursday and next moves to the Senate. While enacting much of Mr. Trump’s domestic agenda, including big tax cuts largely benefiting wealthier Americans, the legislation also makes substantial spending cuts to Medicaid that congressional budget scorekeepers say will leave millions of low-income people without health insurance.

The cuts, if approved by the Senate, would pose a tricky political and economic hurdle for the states and Washington, D.C., which use their own funds to provide health insurance to some people in the U.S. without authorization.

Those states would see their federal reimbursement for people covered under the Affordable Care Act’s Medicaid expansion cut by 10 percentage points. The cuts would cost California, the state with the most to lose, as much as $3 billion a year, according to an analysis by KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes KFF Health News.

Together, the 15 affected places cover about 1.9 million immigrants without legal status, according to KFF. The penalty might also apply to other states that cover lawfully residing immigrants, KFF says.

Two of the states — Utah and Illinois — have “trigger” laws that call for their Medicaid expansions to terminate if the feds reduce their funding match. That means unless those states either repeal their trigger laws or stop covering people without legal immigration status, many more low-income Americans could be left uninsured.

The remaining states and Washington, D.C., would have to come up with millions or billions more dollars every year, starting in the 2027 fiscal year, to make up for reductions in their federal Medicaid reimbursements, if they keep covering people in the U.S. without authorization.

Behind California, New York stands to lose the most federal funding — about $1.6 billion annually, according to KFF.

California state Sen. Scott Wiener, a Democrat who chairs the Senate budget committee, said Mr. Trump’s legislation has sown chaos as state legislators work to pass their own budget by June 15.

“We need to stand our ground,” he said. “California has made a decision that we want universal health care and that we are going to ensure that everyone has access to health care, and that we’re not going to have millions of undocumented people getting their primary care in emergency rooms.”

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement that Mr. Trump’s bill would devastate health care in his state.

“Millions will lose coverage, hospitals will close, and safety nets could collapse under the weight,” Newsom said.

In his May 14 budget proposal, Newsom called on lawmakers to cut some benefits for immigrants without legal status, citing ballooning costs in the state’s Medicaid program. If Congress cuts Medicaid expansion funding, the state would be in no position to backfill, the governor said.

Newsom questioned whether Congress has the authority to penalize states for how they spend their own money and said his state would consider challenging the move in court.

Utah state Rep. Jim Dunnigan, a Republican who helped spearhead a bill to cover children in his state regardless of their immigration status, said Utah needs to maintain its Medicaid expansion that began in 2020.

“We cannot afford, monetary-wise or policy-wise, to see our federal expansion funding cut,” he said. Dunnigan wouldn’t say whether he thinks the state should end its immigrant coverage if the Republican penalty provision becomes law.

Utah’s program covers about 2,000 children, the maximum allowed under its law. Adult immigrants without legal status are not eligible. Utah’s Medicaid expansion covers about 75,000 adults, who must be citizens or lawfully present immigrants.

Matt Slonaker, executive director of the Utah Health Policy Project, a consumer advocacy organization, said the federal House bill leaves the state in a difficult position.

“There are no great alternatives, politically,” he said. “It’s a prisoner’s dilemma — a move in either direction does not make much sense.”

Slonaker said one likely scenario is that state lawmakers eliminate their trigger law then find a way to make up the loss of federal expansion funding.

Utah has funded its share of the cost of Medicaid expansion with sales and hospital taxes.

“This is a very hard political decision that Congress would put the state of Utah in,” Slonaker said.

In Illinois, the GOP penalty would have even larger consequences. That’s because it could lead to 770,000 adults‘ losing the health coverage they gained under the state’s Medicaid expansion.

Stephanie Altman, director of health care justice at the Shriver Center on Poverty Law, a Chicago-based advocacy group, said it’s possible her Democratic-led state would end its trigger law before allowing its Medicaid expansion to terminate. She said the state might also sidestep the penalty by asking counties to fund coverage for immigrants. “It would be a hard situation, obviously,” she said.

Altman said the House bill appeared written to penalize Democratic-controlled states because they more commonly provide immigrants coverage without regard for their legal status.

She said the provision shows Republicans’ “hostility against immigrants” and that “they do not want them coming here and receiving public coverage.”

U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson said this month that state programs that provide public coverage to people regardless of immigration status serve as “an open doormat,” inviting more people to cross the border without authorization. He said efforts to end such programs have support in public polling.

A Reuters-Ipsos poll conducted May 16-18 found that 47% of Americans approve of Mr. Trump’s immigration policies and 45% disapprove. The poll found that Mr. Trump’s overall approval rating has sunk 5 percentage points since he returned to office in January, to 42%, with 52% of Americans disapproving of his performance.

The Affordable Care Act, widely known as Obamacare, enabled states to expand Medicaid to adults with incomes of up to 138% of the federal poverty level, or $21,597 for an individual this year. Forty states and Washington, D.C., expanded, contributing to the national uninsured rate dropping to historic lows.

The federal government now pays 90% of the costs for people added to Medicaid under the Obamacare expansion.

In states that cover health care for immigrants in the U.S. without authorization, the Republican bill would reduce the federal government’s contribution from 90% to 80% of the cost of coverage for anyone added to Medicaid under the ACA expansion.

By law, federal Medicaid funds cannot be used to cover people who are in the country without authorization, except for pregnancy and emergency services.

The other states that use their own money to cover people regardless of immigration status are Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington, according to KFF.

Ryan Long, director of congressional relations at Paragon Health Institute, an influential conservative policy group, said that even if they use their own money for immigrant coverage, states still depend on federal funds to “support systems that facilitate enrollment of illegal aliens.”

Long said the concern that states with trigger laws could see their Medicaid expansion end is a “red herring” because states have the option to remove their triggers, as Michigan did in 2023.

The penalty for covering people in the country without authorization is one of several ways the House bill cuts federal Medicaid spending.

The legislation would shift more Medicaid costs to states by requiring them to verify whether adults covered by the program are working. States would also have to recertify Medicaid expansion enrollees’ eligibility every six months, rather than once a year or less, as most states currently do.

The bill would also freeze states’ practice of taxing hospitals, nursing homes, managed-care plans, and other health care companies to fund their share of Medicaid costs.

The Congressional Budget Office said in a May 11 preliminary estimate that, under the House-passed bill, about 8.6 million more people would be without health insurance in 2034. That number will rise to nearly 14 million, the CBO estimates, after the Trump administration finishes new ACA regulations and if the Republican-led Congress, as expected, declines to extend enhanced premium subsidies for commercial insurance plans sold through Obamacare marketplaces.

The enhanced subsidies, a priority of former President Joe Biden, eliminated monthly premiums altogether for some people buying Obamacare plans. They are set to expire at the end of the year.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFF — the independent source for health policy research, polling, and journalism.

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Trump hosting controversial crypto gala with guests who spent millions on Trump family’s meme coin



Trump hosting controversial crypto gala with guests who spent millions on Trump family’s meme coin – CBS News










































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President Trump is hosting a crypto gala at his golf club Thursday night with attendees that spent millions on the Trump family’s new meme digital coin. Nancy Cordes takes a look at the concerns of guests buying access to the president.

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Exclusive — ‘A Million Apprenticeships’: Labor Secretary Reveals Plans to Execute Trump’s Directive for Working Class Boom

WASHINGTON — Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer told Breitbart News exclusively in her office at the U.S. Department of Labor here in Washington last week that she is working tirelessly to execute President Donald Trump’s order to expand the number of apprenticeships in America to at least a million.

“A million apprentices is what the president is asking for,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “We have about somewhere between 680,000 and 700,000 at a time. We just saw 83,000 come online since Jan. 20. We had the International Firefighters here for their very first apprenticeship day that we celebrated and said, ‘We need that workforce in the firefighting system,’ whether it’s wildland firefighters out west or in the east, every single day, how do we fulfill that goal? The only way I can do that is if I’m on the ground asking: ‘Is it working for you?’ Everybody that I’m talking to has said the tariffs and the talks, they’re working for us. So, this job doesn’t seem that hard when he’s leading the way only because he’s laying down all the groundwork for us to come in right behind him and it’s kind of like a vertically integrated team. He’s put together a formidable team to do the job. Somebody like myself can bring trade talks to the table but then say, ‘How’s this working for unions, how’s this working for business owners, and how can I assist you in the compliance of what we’re going to do so we can get to a yes and they can fulfill their goals as well?’”

Of course, Trump was, before his time in politics, the host of the hit show “The Apprentice” on NBC–so this vision from the president for an expansion of apprenticeships in the United States is right up his alley.

Chavez-DeRemer has kicked off a 50-state tour—she’s already been to at least eight states since her confirmation by the U.S. Senate and wants to get to all 50 by the end of the year—where she is listening to workers nationwide and adjusting policies alongside the rest of Trump’s cabinet to fit the needs of the broader economy. She is working with others like Education Secretary Linda McMahon to develop a vision to produce enough skilled workers to meet the needs of the growth that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, among others, are creating for the president.

“As [Trump’s vision] grows the economy, first of all again those investments, when I’m on the ground–I’ve kicked off my 50-state America at Work tour and I have visited eight states and we’ll continue on and finish those 50 states by the end of the year,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “My goal on that is not to check a box. My goal is to go talk to the American worker. What are they thinking? What are they feeling? Do they feel like we’re answering the call as the United States government? We want to work with our state partners. We want to work with our community colleges, our trade schools, our university system. What’s the pipeline for the American worker today that’s more modernized? How do we have flexibility in our labor laws that we can be an ally for our business owners and for our workers? When the president is in international trade talks, when our Secretary of Commerce is right behind him as well as our Secretary of Treasury, and the U.S. Trade Representatives Jamieson Greer, when they’re all in line to say, ‘We’ve got the deals, we’re working them through, we’re going to make sure we onshore these companies, and now I need you, Secretary of Education and Secretary of Labor, to make sure we have the skilled workforce and we put them in the pipeline for apprenticeship programs.’”

Chavez-DeRemer said her 50-state tour so far has “been different in every state,” and that she’s already been to places like Pennsylvania, California, and Oregon, among others.

“I started off in Pennsylvania—of course, I was talking to the electrical workers and that was important to see what are the apprenticeship programs looking like?” Chavez-DeRemer said. “This was a small community that was just outside of Scranton. In a small community, oftentimes bad policies decimate these communities. We were not investing in that local area. For instance, and I didn’t have this discussion in Oregon but I went back to Oregon as part of my circuit, in the timber industry it’s the same thing. Bad policies decimate small communities, and we have to build that back. So, I’m talking to unions. I’m talking to carpenters’ unions. I was in California talking to oil and gas—very self-sustaining, and when we’re talking about energy dominance we can do it cleaner and better and faster and healthier. That’s what Americans are asking for.

I was just in Columbus, Ohio, and you saw the investments. Anheuser-Busch, $300 million that they’re investing in a center of excellence to train their workforce. We saw trade unions across the floor as I toured Anheuser-Busch. We’re talking about what everybody loves to talk about: Drinking beer in America. What could be more blue collar than drinking beer in America? We saw the trade unions on the floor and they’re training them because they know they are the workforce they can count on to build back what they need and that’s the manufacturing jobs we lost.

Then I was with McDonald’s, who released 375,000 new jobs across America—that’s key. They talk about at McDonald’s it’s your first job you’re going to have, but again there are major opportunities there. We listened to a young woman, Anna Maria I think was her name, talk about it and now she’s in HR. So this is something that all companies are doing. I was just on the construction expo on the Mall, and saw many of our construction companies here in America talk about reinvesting and talk about technology investments. But there was a German company there that had often imported to the United States and now they are building and manufacturing and doing some stuff here and going to be an exporter out and they’re a German company. So you’re seeing these foreign companies, you kind of asked about that, coming here and exporting out. We want to be a net exporter in order to grow this economy and that’s what the president has asked us to do.”

Chavez-DeRemer said too that the president is focused on a long-term vision for the U.S. economy that sets the nation up for a century to come.

“Trust is built on one, keeping your word, and two, understanding what the modern workforce looks like—and then listening to the market demands,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “I was a mayor before coming here. For far too long, we don’t have the conversations with the industries in our communities. ‘What do you need? Who do you need? How many do you need? How can I supplement that assistance with public and private partnerships?’ That’s what you’re seeing that the president is doing. He knows the private sector and he know the public sector. He has asked to bring the two together, and to bring labor unions together, bring businesses together, and fill that pipeline with the workers. We want all barriers to go away. Of course, I’ll look to Congress to do their job when we’re talking about grant funding or we’re talking about education investment. That’s important for them to determine what’s best for their respective states and then I’ll enforce those laws that come into play.

“I want to give them all the technical assistance that they need to get the policies that are best. The president is focused on 100 years from now. He doesn’t even talk about tomorrow. He’s talking about what are the best policies for America as a whole. He wants to be not only energy-dominant but he wants to be workforce-development dominant and he wants America to be leading the way for all other countries. They’re working with us. That is exactly what he set out to do and now he’s delivering.”

Chavez-DeRemer also said she is noticing that union workers, especially those in the trade unions, are coming to Trump’s side in a big way, rallying behind the president.

“We saw that with the Teamsters this past election where almost 60 percent supported the president,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “Listen, I don’t ask if you’re a Republican or a Democrat in the workforce. I just care if we’re providing the workforce for you. That being said, the data has shown a lot of the tradesmen and women have conservative values because they care about their families, they want freedom to move about the cabin so to speak, and they want to be able to—and he’s allowing for that. I think what the president has exposed is the status quo doesn’t work anymore. This is a new day for America. As the president says, the golden age is upon us. I’ve said it myself because people feel it. People are experiencing the positivity he is exuding. He just spoke at the Alabama graduation a couple weeks ago and he told those young people, ‘Don’t let anybody tell you you can’t do what you need to do.’ That’s what a president should do. That’s exactly what he’s doing and he is promising them that ‘I’m going to deliver not only what I promised to your parents and grandparents, but now I’m going to deliver for the next generation because you deserve it and Americans deserve it.’”

Chavez-DeRemer also said the United States is already undergoing, thanks to Trump, a blue collar boom.

“I don’t know if we’re headed there—we’re already there. We’re there, because if you listen to what the community has asked you to do—community colleges, trade schools, schools for technical certification have already been on the ground doing this work,” she said. “But they’ve just been a conduit and they’ve been this standalone of ‘Hey, I can upscale and rescale the American worker. Watch.’ And they’ve been doing it. Now, they’ve been given the blessing of ‘You’re the ones helping these people.’

“Or, actually, anybody who wants to go back and get a new certificate in a new skill, the president is allowing them to do that. Look at what the president has done with the executive order on artificial intelligence. You think to yourself, ‘Why would he do that?’ Well, it’s the modern economy, it’s the answer to the modern workforce—we don’t want to displace the American worker. We do want to assist them, and if you talk to businesses they’re telling us for modernizing and streamlining and almost the efficiency of the systems in itself will help the American worker. So we’re focused on that to align, and we’re working with our education system—Secretary McMahon and I are in close conversations about how we can make sure we can remove the barriers for education for the future workforce, and of course that’s going to often flow through education, but that is our future workforce and I want to see some of that come right through the Department of Labor so we can guarantee that businesses will have the workforces they are asking for.”

Trump’s Labor Secretary has also clawed back billions of unspent COVID funds, and eliminated Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) policies at the Department of Labor.

“Over $4 billion of unspent COVID funds were just sitting out in the coffers of some of these states,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “We’ve clawed back a little over $2 billion, or almost $2 billion, and we’ll continue to recover the rest of that and return it to the United States Treasury. There is no reason those COVID dollars should be there. COVID has been over for years. Those dollars should come back to the United States and the fact that the last administration and the last Department of Labor didn’t follow through with that… We’re telling that story to the American people because they deserve to know where their hard-earned tax dollars are going. Same with the DEI you mentioned. There is no space for classification. We want to make sure this is a federal government run on meritocracy. The president has been clear about that. Of course, we’ll support the president’s executive order on that because we want to support all American workers and still follow the law.”

As for the Democrats, Chavez-DeRemer said she believes they have not learned their lessons from their mistakes in the 2024 election and lead-up to that.

“They certainly haven’t learned their lesson, which is surprising to me—well, it’s actually not surprising from them. But it is surprising that they’re not listening to the American people,” Chavez-DeRemer said. “I think they have one priority, and that’s an anti-Trump priority. It really makes their vision clouded. That’s unfortunate, really, for some of the congressmen and women who are here and have been here a very long time saying they are fighting for the American worker, but this is just an anti-Trump movement that his Cabinet is not going to let stand. We’re going to work hard for him, and we’re going to continue to deliver on the America First agenda that he has said he wants to deliver on. I can’t think of enough things to say where he has given his Cabinet Secretaries the latitude to do the jobs he has asked us to do so that he can deliver on the promises he made to the American people.”

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What’s in Trump’s House-passed “one big, beautiful bill”

Washington — House Republicans made a number of last-minute changes to the legislation containing President Trump’s second-term agenda in order to win over opposing factions in the GOP. And, after an all-night session, the measure, entitled the “one big, beautiful bill,” squeaked through by a single vote.  

It’ll now go to the Senate, which will leave its own mark on the bill. But here’s what’s in the legislation that was passed by the House Thursday. 

Tax cuts and extensions

At the center of the legislation — and accounting for its biggest expense — are the provisions extending Mr. Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. With the cuts slated to sunset at year’s end, the extension and new tax cuts have been a key priority for congressional Republicans and the White House.

Beyond the 2017 tax cuts, the legislation includes a number of tax cuts that the president touted on the campaign trail. It includes no taxes on tips for workers in the service industry, like those who work at restaurants and bars, as well as people who work in the beauty industry. But it’s a temporary exemption that expires at the end of 2028. The package also includes no taxes on overtime through 2028. And the new legislation would allow tax deductions on up to $10,000 in interest on auto loans for cars assembled in the U.S. This provision would be in place until 2029.

The bill would also eliminate a longstanding $200 tax on gun silencers, which has been on the books since Congress passed the National Firearms Act in 1934. 

And among the bill’s provisions is a temporary $500 increase in the child tax credit, bringing it to $2,500 through 2028.  

The package also includes a tax on remittances, imposing a tax on cash payments sent by non-U.S. citizens to family members in their home countries. Though the bill initially would have subjected individuals to a 5% excise tax, the managers amendment, which contained the updates to the bill, lowered the tax to 3.5%.

Medicaid restrictions

The legislation includes changes to Medicaid, a popular entitlement program that provides government-sponsored health care for low-income Americans — imposing work requirements for able-bodied adults without children, more frequent eligibility checks, cutting federal funds to states that use Medicaid infrastructure to provide health care coverage to undocumented immigrants and banning Medicaid from covering gender transition services for children and adults.

The amendment speeds up the implementation of the work requirements from Jan. 1, 2029, to no later than Dec. 31, 2026, a change sought by hardliners. The work requirements would apply to Medicaid recipients without disabilities between the ages of 18 and 65, and those who do not have a child under the age of 7.  

Increasing the State and Local Tax Deduction, or SALT

Also included in the package is an increase to the cap on the State and Local Tax Deduction, which was imposed by the 2017 Trump tax law and currently stands at $10,000. 

Before the rule, taxpayers could deduct all their state and local taxes from their federal taxes, which some policymakers have said mainly benefits wealthy homeowners in states with high taxes, such as New York and California. But advocates for increasing the caps argue that the $10,000 cap is increasingly impacting middle-class homeowners who live in regions where property taxes are rising.

The package initially included a $30,000 cap, but blue-state Republicans threatened to withhold their support, and they ultimately reached an agreement with leadership to increase the deduction to $40,000 per household for incomes up to $500,000.

Border security funding

Though the bulk of the funding allocated in the legislation goes toward tax cuts, it also includes resources for border security and defense. Among the bill’s provisions is $46.5 billion for the border wall, $4.1 billion to hire Border Patrol agents and other personnel and more than $2 billion for signing and retention bonuses for Border Patrol agents. It also includes an additional $1,000 fee for people who are filing for asylum in the U.S. 

The amendment to the legislation added an additional $12 billion for expenses related to border security.

$1,000 “Trump accounts” for child savings 

The legislation also creates $1,000 savings accounts for children, which were originally titled “MAGA accounts” — Money Accounts for Growth and Advancement. The name has been updated to “Trump accounts.” Under the plan, the federal government will contribute $1,000 to the accounts of children born between 2024 and 2028. Parents can contribute up to $5,000 a year. The funds, which can begin to be distributed once the child turns 18, can be used for higher education, job training and the purchase of their first home. 

While income on the accounts can grow on a tax-deferred basis, distributions for qualified expenses, like those mentioned above, would be taxed at a long-term capital gains rate. Another type of education savings vehicle, 529 accounts, enables parents to save and grow the accounts on a tax-deferred basis, too, but the money can be withdrawn for specific education-related expenses tax-free.

Restrictions on food stamps

The package also raises the upper age requirement for able-bodied adults without children to qualify for benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, also known as SNAP, or food stamps. Currently, in order to qualify, able-bodied adults between 18-54 must meet work requirements. The House bill would update the age requirement to 18-64 and would also shift more of the costs to states. 

Rolling back clean energy programs

The bill would also roll back some of the clean energy tax credits under the Biden-era climate and health care law, like an earlier phasing out of a tax break for clean energy vehicles. A late addition to the bill would move up the timeline to end tax credits for new renewable energy power plants as well, requiring them to begin construction within 60 days of the enactment of the legislation and be in service by the end of 2028. The measure makes an exception for nuclear plants, which must be under construction by the end of 2028.

Addressing the debt limit

With a major deadline to address the debt limit on the horizon, the legislation would raise the debt ceiling by $4 trillion. 

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has urged Congress to address the debt limit by mid July, warning that the U.S. could be unable to pay its bills as soon as August without action. Congressional Republicans added the debt ceiling to the larger budget package to bypass negotiating with Democrats on the issue, since the budget legislation can move forward in the Senate without support from across the aisle.  

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