
Mexico Congress Backs Bill to Overhaul Telecoms Regulations
Lawmakers voted 369-104 in favor of the bill on Tuesday, with three abstentions, the lower house said in a social media post. They are now discussing specific articles of the legislation, which has already been passed by the Senate. It will only require the signature of President Claudia Sheinbaum, who supports the bill, to become law.
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Bloomberg
24 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
BYD Shelves Plans to Build Major Mexico Car Plant Over Trump's Trade War
China's top electric vehicle maker, BYD Co., has shelved plans to build a major plant in Mexico over geopolitical tensions and uncertainty stemming from US President Donald Trump's trade policies. The company remains interested in expanding in the Americas but has no timeline to make a new investment, BYD Executive Vice President Stella Li said in a Tuesday interview in the Brazilian state of Bahia, where the company is opening its first factory outside Asia.
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
The ‘big beautiful bill' would supercharge Trump's immigration crackdown. Here's how, in 6 charts.
Republicans are on the brink of handing President Trump an enormous injection of money to fund his hard-line immigration agenda. The 'big beautiful bill,' which is facing what could be its final legislative hurdle in the House of Representatives, includes roughly $170 billion in additional funding to supercharge Trump's mass deportation efforts and ramp up border security. While there are ongoing debates within the GOP over what should go in the final package, none of those disagreements have centered around immigration funding, which was virtually unchanged between the Senate and House versions of the bill. The mega-bill would empower the Trump administration to build new immigration detention facilities, hire thousands more immigration officers, construct new sections of Trump's long-promised border wall and pour billions of dollars into other aspects of immigration enforcement. Here are the details of what the bill would mean for the American immigration system. One of the signature promises of Trump's first presidential term was his pledge to build an 'impenetrable, physical, tall, powerful, beautiful southern border wall' across the full length of the U.S.-Mexico border. Legal challenges, logistical snags and funding shortfalls prevented him from delivering on that promise. During his first term, his administration replaced more than 400 miles worth of existing barriers, but only built 47 miles of new wall where none had existed before — at an estimated cost of $15 billion. The new bill provides more than three times that amount for an 'integrated border barrier system' that includes a plan to build 700 miles of new walls, 900 miles of barriers along the Rio Grande River, more than 600 miles of secondary barriers and an array of cutting-edge technologies to bolster the physical barriers, according to estimates from the GOP-led House Committee on Homeland Security. Since returning to the White House, Trump has mounted an unprecedented and highly controversial campaign to sweep up and deport millions of immigrants living in the U.S. So far, though, the scope of his ambitions has outstretched the logistical capacity of the agencies tasked with carrying out those orders, particularly Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). ICE is on pace so far this year to more than double the number of arrests that it made in 2024, but is still trending well short of the targets his administration has set. Deportations are up, too, but only slightly above where they were during former President Joe Biden's last year in office. One of the biggest bottlenecks slowing ICE's deportation progress is a lack of space to house all of the people they want to detain. Officially, ICE has enough money for 41,000 beds in detention centers across the country, but the agency reported it was detaining more than 59,000 people as of late last month. The bill includes $45 billion to dramatically increase ICE's detention capacity. According to estimates by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the agency's current $3.4 billion detention budget would more than double next year and gradually increase until it reaches nearly $15 billion by 2029. The bill doesn't call for ICE to build a specific number of beds, but Trump's border czar Tom Homan has said the agency will need a minimum of 100,000 beds to carry out its mass deportation plans. Some experts believe the true total could ultimately prove to be as high as 200,000. With this huge influx of funding, immigration detention would rival the federal prison system, both in terms of capacity and funding. There are currently more than 155,000 people being held in federal prisons nationwide, well above ICE's stated goal but below where some estimates fall. Thanks to a modest funding boost in the bill, the Bureau of Prisons would have an average annual budget of about $9.5 billion over the next 10 years. That would be roughly equivalent to ICE's average yearly detention funding of $9.7 billion, but dwarfed by the $14.9 billion the CBO anticipates ICE to receive in 2029. On top of the extra funding for the wall and detention facilities, the bill would also give ICE an additional $31 billion, with the bulk of that money intended to help the agency hire new enforcement officers. Right now, the agency has 6,000 people on staff dedicated to its Enforcement and Removal Operations. The bill would give ICE the resources it needs to hire 10,000 more. Another $12 billion in the bill would go to U.S. Customs and Border Protection to hire 5,000 new customs officers and 3,000 new Border Patrol agents. The bill allocates $12.5 billion to support immigration enforcement efforts by state and local authorities. It would also provide $6.2 billion for border screening and surveillance technology, 'including artificial intelligence, machine learning, and other innovative technologies.' The legislation would also impose new costs on immigrants hoping to be granted a legal right to stay in the U.S. Applying for asylum, which has historically been free, would now come with a $100 charge. The fee to apply for Temporary Protected Status would increase from $50 to $500, and the price of appealing a judge's immigration order would jump from $110 to $900.


New York Times
33 minutes ago
- New York Times
What's in Our Queue? ‘Face in the Crowd' and More
I'm a White House correspondent. I spend a lot of time and psychic energy reporting on the daily convulsions in Washington. I think it's good to unplug from the warp-speed news cycle from time to time, to let my mind wander to faraway places and the past. It helps → Elia Kazan's 1957 movie about another charismatic loudmouth who whips up a populist furor and rides it all the way to the pinnacle of power is another thing worth revisiting. It's a movie about mass media as much as about politics. I finally read this most famous of Russian novels and loved it for its cynical, florid absurdism, and most of all for the chapter on Satan's grand ball. The writing is so over the top and the guest list so wicked, it reminded me almost of Tom Wolfe describing a 1980s Park Avenue dinner party. This comprehensive, compulsively watchable docuseries about what happened after 9/11 features original interviews from big players in the Bush administration and beyond who played pivotal, often disastrous, roles in those years leading up to these wars we've only just disentangled ourselves from. I recently read for the first time Robert Penn Warren's Pulitzer Prize-winning opus of a novel based on Huey Long, a.k.a the Kingfish, a.k.a the Dictator of Louisiana. It's such a dark, riveting tale of politics, power, the press, populism and elites, and I love the way he writes about the land itself. It's all sulfuric atmospherics. This masterpiece from 1969 unravels what life was like in one small town in France that collaborated with the Nazis. It's more than four hours, but gets better as it goes — the sort of thing you put on on a gloomy Sunday when you want to put your phone in the other room and really get lost in something.