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  • Marlow on Musk v. Trump: Elon’s Political Instincts Stink, He Has ‘No Stroke’ in Washington

    Marlow on Musk v. Trump: Elon’s Political Instincts Stink, He Has ‘No Stroke’ in Washington

    On Tuesday’s “Alex Marlow Show,” host and Breitbart Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow talked about the reconciliation bill.

    Marlow stated, “Musk has no political stroke and he has terrible political instincts. … He is pro-China, he is pro-H1Bs, he is pro-EV subsidies and mandates. The guy does drugs, he does not believe in the traditional family. He’s called Americans entitled and lazy.”

    “The Alex Marlow Show,” hosted by Breitbart Editor-in-Chief Alex Marlow, is a weekday podcast produced by Breitbart News and Salem Podcast Network. You can subscribe to the podcast on YouTube, Rumble, Apple Podcasts, and Spotify.

    Follow Breitbart.tv on Twitter @BreitbartVideo

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  • US university bans trans athletes under pressure from Trump administration

    US university bans trans athletes under pressure from Trump administration

    US president opens door to releasing more information on accused sex trafficker amid outrage among his base.

    Trump

    The Israeli bombings come after the Syrian government and a Druze leader both said the truce had been broken.

    smoke rises in the distances as soldiers hold a Syrian flag

    US president says Jakarta will buy 50 Boeing jets and billions of dollars of energy and farm products under the deal.

    President Donald Trump speaks at the

    EU demands more action from Israel on aid deal as attacks mount and famine looms.

    Palestinian children queue for a portion of hot food distributed by a charity kitchen at the Nuseirat refugee camp. The UN aid agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) aid Tuesday that one in 10 children screened in their facilities are now malnourished. [Eyad Baba/AFP]

    Israeli troops again open fire on desperate aid seekers, killing two and wounding 30 others near Rafah.

    Smoke rises after an artillery shell fired by an Israeli tank towards aid seekers in the Zikim area, west of Gaza City, 25 June 2025.

    Francesca Albanese addresses delegates from 30 countries to discuss ways nations can try to stop Israel’s offensive.

    ISRAEL-PALESTINIANS/COLOMBIA-CONFERENCE

    Trump’s envoy Mike Huckabee calls the killing of 20-year-old Sayfollah Musallet in occupied West Bank a ‘criminal’ act.

    Palestinian flags

    Here are the key events on day 1,238 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

    a firefighter hoses a house surrounded by smoke

    The weapons may stop some attacks but don’t cross a red line for Putin and fall short of Kyiv’s needs, analysts say.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy looks on during a visit to a military training area to find out about the training of Ukrainian soldiers on the “Patriot” anti-aircraft missile system, at an undisclosed location, in Germany, June 11, 2024. Jens Buttner/Pool via REUTERS

    Duterte supporters step up digital smear campaigns against opponents, using AI-generated content, after his ICC arrest.

    Vice President Sara Duterte and President Ferdinand Marcos Jr raise their linked arms and smile.

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  • Orange County congresswoman targeted by protests over Trump megabill, cuts to healthcare

    Orange County congresswoman targeted by protests over Trump megabill, cuts to healthcare

    Protesters railed on Tuesday against an Orange County congresswoman who could be a crucial vote on President Trump’s proposal to cut more than $1 trillion in federal dollars that helped pay for healthcare for those in need and extend tax cuts for millions of Americans.

    Trump’s proposed “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” narrowly passed the U.S. Senate hours before hundreds of people gathered in a cul-de-sac outside of the Anaheim field office of Republican Rep. Young Kim to protest those cuts. The legislation still needs to be voted on by the U.S. House of Representatives, which could happen before the end of the week.

    “I don’t know why they call it beautiful, because there’s nothing about it that’s beautiful. It’s harmful, it’s reckless, and it’s cruel, and it’s going to hurt people,” said Melody Mendenhall, a nurse at UCLA who is active with the California Nurses Assn., which was among the groups that organized the protest. “Rep. Young Kim, hear our cry, hear our voices. We need our Medicaid. We cannot afford this type of reckless cuts and behavior.”

    A security guard blocked the parking lot to Kim’s office and at least a half-dozen Anaheim police officers watched the protest unfold.

    For the record:

    9:47 a.m. July 2, 2025An earlier version of this story said observers of the protest who dashed inside the building when protesters approached it appeared to be members of Rep. Young Kim’s staff. A member of Kim’s congressional staff said the observers were part of the building’s management team and did not work for the congresswoman.

    Several people who, according to an official in Kim’s congressional office, were members of the building’s management team watched the demonstration from outside the building before they dashed inside when protesters marched to the building, unsuccessfully sought to enter it and then began chanting “Shame! Shame!”

    In a statement, Kim said that her door was always open to Californians in her district.

    “I understand some of my constituents are concerned and know how important Medicaid services are for many in my community, which is why I voted to protect and strengthen Medicaid services for our most vulnerable citizens who truly need it,” Kim said. “I have met with many of these local healthcare advocates in recent months.”

    Trump’s proposal would dramatically overhaul the nation’s tax code by making cuts approved during the president’s first term permanent, a major benefit to the corporations and the nation’s wealthy, while slashing funding for historic federal safety-net programs including Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which helps provide food to low-income Americans.

    Roughly 15 million Californians, more than a third in the state, are on Medi-Cal, the state’s version of Medicaid, with some of the highest percentages in rural counties that supported Trump in the November election. More than half of California children receive healthcare coverage through Medi-Cal.

    A version of the Republican bill was passed by the House with Kim’s support. The U.S. Senate narrowly approved an amended version of the bill Tuesday. The defection of three GOP senators meant Vice President JD Vance had to cast the tie-breaking vote for it to pass in that chamber.

    The House and Senate will now work to reconcile their two different versions of the bill. This week was a district workweek for members of Congress, but House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) ordered members back to Washington, D.C., for votes on the bill that could occur Wednesday or Thursday.

    Republicans hope to get the legislation to President Trump’s desk for his signature by the Fourth of July, though there is some concern among its members about whether they will have enough votes to pass the bill because of potential defections and the united Democratic opposition.

    An analysis released by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on Sunday estimated that the Senate version of the proposal would increase the national deficit by nearly $3.3 trillion from 2025 to 2034 and would result in 11.8 million Americans losing health insurance in less than a decade.

    Trump praised the passage of the bill on social media and urged House Republicans to support the Senate plan.

    The proposal has caused a rift within the GOP, and some House members have expressed reservations about the measure because of the amount it would add to the nation’s deficit and its effect on their constituents.

    “I’ve been clear from the start that I will not support a final reconciliation bill that makes harmful cuts to Medicaid, puts critical funding at risk, or threatens the stability of healthcare providers,” in his congressional district, Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford) wrote on the social media site X on Sunday.

    He represents more than half a million Central Valley residents who rely on Medicaid — the most of any congressional district in California, according to the UC Berkeley Labor Center. A spokesperson for Valadao on Tuesday didn’t respond to a question about how the congressman planned to vote.

    Kim’s Orange County district is more affluent than Valadao’s, but roughly one in five of her constituents relies on Medicaid.

    The congresswoman was en route to Washington at the time of the protest, according to a spokesperson.

    Outside her Anaheim field office, protester after protester described how the bill would impact vulnerable Californians, such as disabled children, the elderly, veterans and those who would lose access to reproductive healthcare.

    “The stakes have never been higher. We are living in a time when our rights are under attack,” said Emily Escobar, a public advocacy manager for Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties.

    She said that federal funds do not pay for abortions, but help pay for other vital healthcare, such as cancer screenings, preventative care, testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections and access to contraception. More than one-third of Planned Parenthood’s patients nationwide reside in California.

    These cuts will result in clinics being shut down, effectively reducing access to abortion, Escobar said.

    “Let me make this clear, this bill is a backdoor abortion ban,” she said.

    Shari Home, 73, said she and her husband were weighing how to divide their Social Security income on food, medication and medical supplies after her husband, who suffers several chronic health conditions, fell last year.

    “The hospitalizations were so expensive, so we applied for and got Medi-Cal in January and food assistance, and it’s been such a lifesaver,” said the Laguna Woods resident. “Without Medi-Cal, I don’t know what we would do. Our lives would not be good. We would not have the medications that he needs.”

    Michelle Del Rosario, 57, wore a button picturing her son William, 25, on her blouse. The Orange resident, one of Kim’s constituents who has previously voted for her, is the primary caregiver for her son, who has autism, epilepsy and does not speak.

    Her son relies on his Medi-Cal coverage for his $5,000-a-month seizure medicine, as well as the home health support he receives, she said.

    “He lives at home. He has desires, at some point, to live independently, to work, but he needs” these support services for that to happen, Del Rosario said.

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  • ‘You’ll always be my friend’: Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

    ‘You’ll always be my friend’: Trump and Ron DeSantis put aside rivalry at ‘Alligator Alcatraz’

    There was no evidence of the onetime rivalry between President Donald Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis on Tuesday as they came together in a common cause: opening an immigrant detention center in the swampy heart of Florida.

    Trump and his top deputies visited the Everglades, where Florida officials delivered a win for his anti-immigration agenda and positioned the state at the forefront of his crackdown.

    The facility, which Republican leaders dubbed “Alligator Alcatraz,” is set to house 3,000 detainees and took just eight days to construct.

    “It might be as good as the real Alcatraz,” Trump told reporters Tuesday. “It’s a little controversial, but I couldn’t care less.”

    The push behind “Alligator Alcatraz” is not only to keep Florida aligned with Trump on immigration but also to reposition some of the state’s biggest Republican players politically. DeSantis, for instance, fought vocally with Trump during the 2024 presidential primaries; during the visit Tuesday, however, he and Trump praised each other.

    “You are my friend, and you’ll always be my friend, and we may have some skirmishes, even in the future. I doubt it, but I will always come back, because we have blood that seems to match pretty well,” Trump said.

    “I think it is a 10,” Trump added of their relationship. “Maybe a 9.9. … We get along great.”

    DeSantis, unprompted, quickly chimed in with a reminder that he endorsed Trump as soon as he exited the presidential race in early 2024.

    “The thing about it is, I endorsed him,” DeSantis said. “Raised one of his PACs millions and millions of dollars.”

    Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis politics political politician
    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis greets President Donald Trump after Trump arrived at Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport in Ochopee on Tuesday for the opening of the detention facility.Evan Vucci / AP

    Trump and DeSantis, along with Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, toured the facility in a made-for-TV presentation of the opening of what is one of the largest immigrant detention facilities in the country.

    A number of the media outlets on the tour were Trump-friendly organizations, who asked questions that praised him or allowed him to hype his agenda.

    One reporter asked him to weigh in on the “disastrous handling of the border” by President Joe Biden’s administration, while another had him comment on how his “beloved New York City may well be led by a communist soon.”

    “What’s your message to Gov. Gavin Newsom?” right-wing YouTube personality Benny Johnson asked.

    Trump responded that the “first thing” Newsom, the governor of California and a potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate, should do “is come here and learn something.”

    The political undertones of the event were hard to ignore. Among those Trump invited to attend was Rep. Byron Donalds, a Florida Republican running for governor in 2026. At the same time, DeSantis’ wife, Casey DeSantis, continues to consider a competing run for governor.

    During a roundtable discussion Tuesday, Donalds — sitting just a couple of feet from DeSantis — said he “commended” him for his work to combat illegal immigration. The moment represented political foes’ setting aside their feud, at least for the day.

    Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, a close DeSantis ally, hatched the idea for Alligator Alcatraz last month, but it got national traction when DeSantis did a live tour of the facility Friday on “Fox and Friends,” which caught the Trump administration off-guard.

    Noem and top adviser Corey Lewandowski supported the facility but wanted the opening Tuesday to be the formal public rollout, two sources familiar with the matter told NBC News.

    “DeSantis upset Noem and Lewandowski with his Fox News tour of the detention site,” a Republican operative familiar with the process said. “Noem wanted an event for Tuesday and didn’t want anyone having eyes on the site and needed to push until Tuesday because she was traveling.”

    The Republican operative said Noem’s staff asked DeSantis not to do the Fox News tour.

    “The DHS team asked DeSantis not to do his Friday event,” the person added. “DeSantis did what was best for DeSantis and got out in front…angering both Noem and Lewandowski.”

    Another source familiar with the matter said the ire did not stem directly from the White House but from Lewandowski.

    “He lost his s—,” the person said.

    Lewandowski and DeSantis’ political team did not respond to requests for comment. The White House called the assertion “fake news.”

    “Leave it to the Fake News NBC to write about baseless gossip following a hugely successful event with President Trump, Secretary Noem and Governor DeSantis at Alligator Alcatraz,” White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said in a statement. “Here’s the real story that the state-of-the-art facility will play an important role in fulfilling the President’s promise to keep Americans safe and deport criminal illegal aliens.”

    “The President is grateful to work with both Secretary Noem and Governor DeSantis on this project,” she added.

    Still, the event signaled that DeSantis was publicly rekindling his relationship with Trump, and to some degree it was seen as a boon for his attempt to again regain national political footing for a potential presidential campaign in 2028, even as Vice President JD Vance is widely seen as the current front-runner.

    “No one thought Trump would so closely embrace DeSantis today,” said a longtime Florida operative who was at the event. “We didn’t think he would try to undercut him or insult him, but Trump was over the top in his praise today. I don’t know what that means, but it was a good day for Ron DeSantis.”

    The Everglades facility has given DeSantis and the state’s Republican leaders, including Uthmeier, a boost to their fundraising efforts, even as Democrats have decried the effort as cruel to those accused of being in the country illegally.

    “‘Alligator Alcatraz’ is a callous political stunt,” said David Jolly, a former Republican member of Congress who is running for governor as a Democrat in 2026. “Florida’s most pressing challenge is the housing affordability crisis created by Republican leaders, not immigrants working to support our state’s economy.”

    Since the announcement of the facility, there have also been protests — including one Tuesday for the opening — and a lawsuit filed by environmental groups concerned over the impact it could have on the Everglades.

    The facility was made possible by DeSantis’ using emergency powers he enacted in 2023. The state built what amounts to a tent city, hiring a dozen vendors and seizing land from Miami-Dade County over local leaders’ objections. The facility is housed on a little-used airstrip that includes a runway that DeSantis said can be used to quickly fly undocumented immigrants to third countries if deportation is deemed appropriate.

    Matt Dixon

    Matt Dixon is a senior national politics reporter for NBC News, based in Florida.

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  • House Democrat slams Fetterman for ‘beach’ remark

    House Democrat slams Fetterman for ‘beach’ remark

    Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.) took a swing at fellow Pennsylvanian Sen. John Fetterman (D) over comments he made as the Senate was on its way to passing President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” in which he said he had “missed” a beach trip. “I will do whatever it takes…
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  • SBA approves Gov. Newsom’s disaster relief request after LA protests

    SBA approves Gov. Newsom’s disaster relief request after LA protests

    Kelly Loeffler, administrator of the US Small Business Administration (SBA), announced Tuesday that SBA has approved California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s request for disaster relief assistance to help small businesses in downtown Los Angeles following last month’s protests. File Photo by Al Drago/UPI | License Photo

    July 1 (UPI) — The Trump administration has approved California Gov. Gavin Newsom‘s request for disaster relief following last month’s riots in downtown Los Angeles, the Small Business Administration announced Tuesday.

    President Donald Trump and SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler approved the state’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan declaration that will allow small businesses to apply for up to $2 million in low-interest EIDL loans.

    “Gavin Newsom let the migrant mob torch Los Angeles,” Loeffler wrote Tuesday in a post on X.

    “Now he’s asking SBA for disaster relief to fix an estimated $1 billion in damage. It’s another Newsom crisis that POTUS is cleaning up for law-abiding citizens and small businesses.”

    Gavin Newsom let the migrant mob torch Los Angeles.

    Now he’s asking SBA for disaster relief to fix an est. $1 BILLION in damage.

    It’s another Newsom crisis that @POTUS is cleaning up for law-abiding citizens & small businesses.https://t.co/cxz1G2T8kk— Kelly Loeffler (@SBA_Kelly) July 1, 2025

    SBA disaster assistance teams are also providing on-the-ground support to those impacted, according to Loeffler.

    Hundreds were arrested last month for looting and vandalism at dozens of businesses after days of protests directed at Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids.

    During the riots, the Trump administration deployed thousands of National Guard troops to help law enforcement officers, who called the “unlawful and dangerous behavior” a “concerning escalation” after demonstrators flooded LA streets and freeways.

    Newsom blamed Trump’s decision to call up the National Guard for creating the escalation, calling it a “breach of state sovereignty.”

    “We didn’t have a problem until Trump got involved,” Newsom said on June 8. “This is a serious breach of state sovereignty — inflaming tensions while pulling resources from where they’re actually needed.”

    Days later, Trump accused Newsom of failing to protect communities and said without the intervention, Los Angeles “would be burning to the ground right now.”

    Newsom has not commented on California’s disaster relief approval.

    “Gov. Newsom allowed a mob to rampage Los Angeles — standing with violent rioters, paid protesters and criminal illegal aliens over law-abiding citizens. Despite an estimated $1 billion in damage, he refused federal relief for weeks, insisting that the riots were peaceful even as small business owners stood in the rubble,” said Loeffler.

    “Although the SBA has approved California’s disaster relief request and will begin delivering immediate aid to the innocent victims, Gov. Newsom must take accountability for his state-sanctioned crisis.”

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  • Dem FL State Rep: Trump Is ‘Building Modern-Day Concentration Camps’

    Dem FL State Rep: Trump Is ‘Building Modern-Day Concentration Camps’

    Tuesday on CNN’s “OutFront,” Florida State Rep. Angie Nixon (D) accused President Donald Trump of building “modern-day concentration camps” while discussing the new Everglades immigration enforcement center.

    Nixon said, “This isn’t about safety. This is actually about Donald Trump building modern day concentration camps in an effort to disappear people from our communities. Donald Trump’s blueprint for America has now become barbed wire and broken families. You don’t make America great again by doing these. types of things. All he is simply doing is returning our country to the worst chapters of our history.”

    She added, “They want to take $450 million of our taxpayer money, and instead of ensuring that we don’t have cuts to Medicaid or addressing issues like the rising cost of property insurance or quality schools for our kids to go to, they want to blow racist dog whistles and push xenophobia instead of handling the things that Floridians and real Americans care about. This is costing us millions and millions of dollars. And again, they’re simply just trying to make modern day concentration camps, which is not what the American people asked for. They are being very inhumane. And again, they are blowing racist dog whistles and it just has to stop.”

    Follow Pam Key on X @pamkeyNEN

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  • Kristi Noem Says Trump Is “Upholding Freedom” by Deporting Cannibals

    Kristi Noem Says Trump Is “Upholding Freedom” by Deporting Cannibals

    Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem is probably best known for the story she told in her memoir about shooting her family’s dog. But shooting dogs is not all she is about. She contains multitudes, okay? For instance, today she shared a story about ICE detaining an alleged cannibal and said cannibal allegedly trying to “eat himself.”

    Speaking at a press conference in Florida with Donald Trump, Noem claimed that the president’s deportation push, which she is overseeing, is about “upholding freedom…the freedom to live safely in this country and to do things legally and to have justice.” The administration, she said, is “going after murderers and rapists and traffickers and drug dealers and getting them off the streets and getting them out of this country, because Joe Biden let the worst of the worst come in here.” You may have heard that, according to CBS News, the arrests of immigrants without criminal histories have spiked, and only about 8% of detainees have been convicted of violent crimes—but that’s not what Noem wanted to talk about.

    “The other day,” she told reporters, “I was talking to some marshals that had been partnering with ICE. They said that they had detained a cannibal and put him on a plane to take him home. And while they had him in his seat, he started to eat himself, and they had to get him off and get him medical attention. These are the kind of deranged individuals that are on our streets in America, that we’re trying to target and get out of our country because they are so deranged they don’t belong here.”

    Speaking of cannibals, Trump brought up Hannibal Lecter again last week, reminding people that while campaigning for president, he talked a lot about the Silence of the Lambs character. As he was bragging about the “record number” of deportations his administration has carried out, he declared: “We’re bringing criminals out by the thousands—nobody can even imagine. They let people in that were murderers—11,888 murderers, gang members, people from mental institutions and insane asylums. You know what that is? Insane asylum? That’s a mental institution on steroids. During the campaign, I’d talk about the late, great Hannibal Lecter. Do you know who that is? Hannibal Lecter? Silence of the Lambs.”

    Lisa Murkowski: Does the spending bill suck? Yes. Did I vote to pass it? Also yes

    Trump muses about deporting US-born citizens

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  • Mexican banks face cascading consequences following US sanctions

    Mexican banks face cascading consequences following US sanctions

    Three Mexican financial institutions sanctioned by the Trump administration last week have felt a cascade of economic consequences

    ByMEGAN JANETSKY Associated Press

    MEXICO CITY — Three Mexican financial institutions sanctioned by the Trump administration last week have felt a cascade of economic consequences following the allegations that they helped launder millions of dollars for drug cartels.

    The U.S. Treasury Department announced that it was blocking transactions between U.S. banks and Mexican branches of CIBanco and Intercam Banco, as well as the brokering firm Vector Casa de Bolsa. All three have fiercely rejected the claims.

    Mexico’s President Claudia Sheinbaum accused U.S. officials of providing no evidence to back their allegations, though the sanctions announcement made specific accusations on how money was transferred through the companies. It detailed how “mules” moved money through accounts in the U.S., as well as transactions carried out with Chinese companies that U.S. officials said provided materials to produce fentanyl.

    Mexico’s banking authority has announced that it is temporarily taking over management of CIBanco and Intercam Banco to protect creditors.

    Sheinbaum said Tuesday that the Mexican government is doing everything within its power to ensure that creditors aren’t affected, and said they were well “within their right” to pull their money from the banks.

    The U.S. Treasury Department said that the sanctions would go into effect 21 days after the announcement.

    Fitch Ratings has downgraded the three institutions and other affiliates, citing “anti-money laundering concerns” and saying the drop “reflects the imminent negative impact” that the sanctions could have.

    “The new ratings reflect the significantly more vulnerable credit profile of these entities in response to the aforementioned warnings, given the potential impact on their ability to meet their financial obligations,” the credit rating agency wrote in a statement.

    On Monday, CIBanco announced that Visa Inc. had announced to them with little warning that it had “unilaterally decided to disconnect its platform for all international transactions” through CIBanco. The bank accused Visa of not complying with the 21-day grace period laid out by the sanctions.

    “We would like to reiterate that your funds are safe and can be reimbursed through our branch network,” the bank wrote. “We reiterate to our customers that this was a decision beyond CIBanco’s control.”

    S&P Ratings also withdrew CIBanco from its ratings index, saying that it was because it had terminated its contracts with the bank following the U.S. Treasury announcement.

    ____

    Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america

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  • House members scramble to return to DC for megabill vote

    Some House members are going to great lengths to make it back to to Washington for a vote on the Republican megabill after severe weather canceled dozens of flights.
    President Donald Trump and Speaker Mike Johnson are pushing to advance the Senate-approved version of Republicans’ agenda bill before July 4 – setting up a condensed timeframe for a House vote…
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