
House advances Trump's massive agenda bill after fiscal hawks cave and more top headlines
2. Millions of Americans warned of terror threat ahead of July 4th celebrations
3. Several missing after powerful explosion at fireworks facility
SCRIPTURE SUPPRESSED – Ski park faces lawsuit after allegedly firing employee for sharing Bible verses on social media. Continue reading …
DREAM TEAM DELIVERS – Critical move from Diddy's attorneys avoided 'disaster,' OJ Simpson's lawyer says. Continue reading …
READ IT – Plea agreement Kohberger accepted to avoid death for murdering Idaho students. Continue reading …
AERIAL WARFARE – Feds to airdrop millions of radiation-treated flies in bizarre border operation. Continue reading …
ICED OUT – Southernmost city in hot water after voting to end agreement that removed criminals. Continue reading …
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UNLIKELY ALLIANCE – Obama and Bush make rare public rebukes of Trump admin. Continue reading …
BORDER BATTLEGROUND – Troops get new powers under Trump's bold border strategy. Continue reading …
SHOWDOWN – Trump calls for Fed Chair Jerome Powell to immediately resign. Continue reading …
NOT LEAVING – ICE flips script on Los Angeles mayor after telling authorities to 'go home.' Continue reading …
NEWSROOM MELTDOWN – CBS staffers revolt over Paramount's 'shameful' Trump settlement. Continue reading …
'ON THE TABLE' – CNN commentator suggests investigating Trump children's citizenship status. Continue reading …
RADICAL RHETORIC – Democratic lawmaker under fire for 'disgusting' attack on immigration agents. Continue reading …
'WRITING ON THE WALL' – Dem strategist predicts Trump could cheat in 2026 midterms if GOP power slips. Continue reading …
HUGH HEWITT: – Morning Glory: Will the House Freedom Caucus desert President Trump and trigger a massive tax hike? Continue reading …
BETHANY MANDEL – Why are museums pushing climate change instead of celebrating America? Continue reading …
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GERM ZONE – Flight attendant reveals 'disgusting' truth about airplane bathrooms. Continue reading …
HOLIDAY HAZARDS – Doctors warn of 'traumatic' July 4th dangers as ER visits soar nationwide. Continue reading …
AMERICAN CULTURE QUIZ – Test yourself on iconic ice cream and marvelous museums. Take the quiz here …
BALTIC BEAUTY – Rare Christian cross among spectacular 1,000-year-old Viking treasures found. Continue reading …
LOOK UP – Rare 'tsunami' roll cloud hovers over beachgoers in popular spot. See video …
RILEY GAINES – UPenn Title IX deal is a huge step in accountability. See video …
CHARLIE HURT – This was the greatest week of any presidency I've seen. See video …
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Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for ‘PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: ‘Main Character Syndrome'
CBS correspondent Scott MacFarlane said he was 'diagnosed with PTSD in 48 hours' following his experience covering the Butler, Pennsylvania, rally where Donald Trump was nearly assassinated because his supporters turned on members of the press – and the 'Gutfeld!' gang couldn't contain their giggles. MacFarlane, who was onsite for the July 2024 incident, said on Chuck Todd's 'The Chuck Toddcast' that 'for those of us there, it was such horror because you saw an emerging America.' More from TheWrap 'Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for 'PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: 'Main Character Syndrome' | Video Trump Says He'll Sue Rupert Murdoch, NewsCorp and WSJ 'Shortly,' Orders Release of Epstein Testimony Stephen Colbert Says CBS Told Him of 'Late Show' Cancellation Just Last Night in Emotional Monologue: 'All Just Going Away' | Video Trump Contributed to Suggestive Jeffrey Epstein 50th Birthday Gift, WSJ Reports: 'We Have Certain Things in Common' 'I got put on trauma leave,' MacFarlane said. 'Not because of the shooting but because — you saw it in the eyes. The reaction of the people. They were coming for us. If he didn't jump up with his fist, they were going to come kill us. There is a subset — not everybody — dozens of people in the crowd to start confronting us, saying, 'You did this, this is your fault, you caused this, you killed him.' And they were going to beat us with their hands.' If MacFarlane was looking for sympathy, he wasn't going to find it on the Fox News late-night show. 'It shows you the level of main character syndrome,' said panelist and comedian Joe DeVito. 'That they were at a place, a man died, the guy running for president almost got his head blown off on live TV, and this guy's like, 'What about me? What about what I went through?'' DeVito said had he been there, he would've gotten PTSD, too – from the Secret Service detail. 'All these tiny little chubby ladies,' DeVito said. 'It was the most bizarre — I would have been freaked out by that. I didn't know the Secret Service would have two dozen tiny Melissa McCarthys climbing over to save your life.' Host Greg Gutfeld steered the conversation for a moment to over-labeling of mental conditions. 'This actually — it speaks to something everyone is kind of scared to talk about, which is the overdiagnosis of PTSD,' Gutfeld said. 'It used to be just for people that suffered war trauma or just violent trauma. But now it's like people say, 'I have PTSD, I had a terrible boss. I was at a rally.'' The Free Press editor Will Rahn then chimed in: 'Listen, I'm a little soft on this issue, I'm millennial. I was traumatized on the way here. So I feel for the guy. Listen, people snap, weird things happen. I don't know. Here's the thing. Going on that main character syndrome thing — there's this big reward for emoting, for going on and being like, 'Let me tell you about my feelings',' on Chuck Todd's podcast audience, about how I felt' … and it's like, I'm an editor. A reporter comes to me and is like, 'Let me tell you about my feelings,' and I'm like, 'No, the story is the president got his ear shot off — not how you felt, how people gave you dirty looks.'' Watch the entire exchange in the video above. The post 'Gutfeld!' Gangs Up on CBS Reporter for 'PTSD' Diagnosis From Trump Rally Shooting: 'Main Character Syndrome' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.


New York Post
26 minutes ago
- New York Post
House passes rescissions package slashing $9B in federal funding for foreign aid, NPR and PBS
House Republicans approved a clawback package Thursday that will cut $9 billion in previously approved federal outlays for foreign aid, NPR and PBS. The so-called rescissions bill passed 216-213, with GOP Reps. Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania and Mike Turner of Ohio joining all present Democrats in voting no. The House faced a Friday deadline to pass the measure, which the White House transmitted to Congress in June in an effort to codify cuts to wasteful spending identified by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Advertisement The Senate passed the bill early Thursday morning, with Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Susan Collins (R-Maine) joining all 46 present Democrats in opposition. 4 House Republicans approved a clawback package on Thursday, passing the so-called rescissions bill 216-213. AFP via Getty Images 4 The package will cut $9 billion in previously approved federal outlays for foreign aid, NPR and PBS. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement The latest House vote approved changes to the measure made by the Senate. It will now head to President Trump's desk for his signature. The measure returns about $8 billion earmarked for the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and upwards of $1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which funds PBS and NPR — spending conservatives have long sought to slash. House Republicans had passed a form of the package early last month, but the Senate struggled over it for weeks amid various concerns about some of the cuts. Eventually, the Trump administration agreed to scrap plans to cut some $400 million from a federal program aimed at fighting AIDS worldwide. Advertisement 4 Returnees cross the border from Iran, on July 3, 2025 in Islam Qala, Afghanistan. Getty Images An effort by Democrats in the House Rules Committee to tack on an amendment calling for the release of documents related to notorious pedophile Jeffrey Epstein was blocked by Republicans on the panel. Republicans in the Rules Committee opted to instead move forward with a nonbinding resolution backing the 'public release of certain documents, records, and communications related to the investigation of Jeffrey Epstein.' House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), who could have exercised his powers under the rules of lower chamber to speak for as long as he could in opposition of the measure, opted to give only a 15-minute speech Thursday night. Advertisement 4 President and CEO of PBS Paula Kerger speaks during the PBS Executive Session at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour at The Langham Huntington, Feb. 2, 2019, in Pasadena, Calif. Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP Earlier this month, Jeffries used his so-called 'magic minute' of debate delay passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act for almost nine hours, shattering the record previously held by former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.). White House Office of Management and Budget Director Russ Vought is expected to send other rescissions requests to Congress in the coming months.


Axios
26 minutes ago
- Axios
House sends cuts to foreign aid, PBS and NPR to Trump's desk
The House voted early Friday to approve President Trump's requested clawback of $9 billion in federal funding for PBS, NPR and foreign aid programs. Why it matters: Democrats fear the victory for the White House — following on DOGE's massive cuts — opens the door for more rescissions packages negating bipartisan spending deals. The measure passed 216-213 with only Republican support shortly ahead of a Friday night deadline. GOP Reps. Mike Turner (Ohio) and Brian Fitzpatrick (Pa.) voted with Democrats against the bill. The big picture: The GOP's rescissions package takes back money that has already been appropriated by Congress and signed into law by the president. The Senate stripped parts of the version the House passed in June, including cuts to PEPFAR — a global health program to prevent HIV and AIDS. The measure passed 51-48 early Thursday in that chamber — also with only Republican support. Two Republicans — Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) — voted with Democrats against the bill. Zoom in: The rescission package stalled in the House on Thursday due to a partisan fight over disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. Multiple factions of the GOP conference raised concerns about Democratic maneuvers in the Rules Committee aimed at pushing Republicans into tough votes related to Epstein. House Republicans spent the day negotiating with leadership about the path forward, which ultimately resulted in a GOP-led amendment that calls for the release of information related to Epstein. The non-binding resolution, which does not have the force of law, is expected to be voted on by the House at a later date. Between the lines: Democrats on Capitol Hill have been exerting increasing pressure on Republicans to break with Trump over his handling of the Epstein files. It's a move designed to deepen divisions among Republicans. The bottom line: Democrats worry Trump will ask Congress to approve even larger rescission packages in the future, potentially undermining bipartisan deals to avoid a government shutdown. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) has warned Republicans against more attempts to rescind federal funding, signaling that could threaten Democrats' support for government funding bills ahead of a Sept. 30 deadline. Unlike the rescissions bills, which have a simple majority threshold for passage, any measure to fund the government before the end of September will require Democratic support to get to 60 votes in the Senate.