
Paul believes Senate vote for NPR, PBS cuts will be ‘very close'
'I suspect it's going to be very close. I don't know if it will be modified in advance, but I can't really honestly look Americans in the face and say that I'm going to be doing something about the deficit if I can't cut $9 billion,' Paul told CBS's Margaret Brennan on 'Face the Nation.'
Republicans including Sens. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.) and Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) have expressed reservations about making deep cuts to NPR and PBS. Some in the GOP are also wary of pulling funding for PEPFAR, the global HIV/AIDS program started under President George W. Bush.
Senators will work out the details of the recissions package this week, facing a Friday deadline to approve the cuts.
'Even though there are people who make arguments for it, and I can make an argument for a different way to cut it, we're going to be presented with a $9 billion cut and a $2.2 trillion deficit,' Paul said. 'So we have to cut spending. Absolutely have to cut spending.'
On Thursday, President Trump threatened to withhold his backing for any Republican who goes against a recissions package, which includes sweeping cuts to foreign aid and public media.
'It is very important that all Republicans adhere to my Recissions Bill and, in particular, DEFUND THE CORPORATION FOR PUBLIC BROADCASTING (PBS and NPR), which is worse than CNN & MSDNC put together,' a Truth Social post from the president said.
'Any Republican that votes to allow this monstrosity to continue broadcasting will not have my support or Endorsement,' he added.
Rounds and other senators have raised fears about the impact of public broadcasting cuts on rural areas that rely on local, government-funded stations for information. Rounds told reporters he planned to negotiate with the White House Office of Management and Budget to tweak the cuts.
'It's not our goal to come back in and totally eliminate a number of the rescissions, but specifically to take care of those that were in some of these rural areas,' Rounds said, according to Deseret News. 'This is their way of getting emergency messages out to people. That's the way in which they communicate in a very rural area.'

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Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Albanese Walks Fine Line Between Xi, Trump in China
00:00 HAIDI: THE AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER IS SET TO MEET WITH HAIDI: THE AUSTRALIAN PRIME MINISTER IS SET TO MEET WITH CHINESE PRESIDENT XI JINPING LATER TODAY IN BEIJING. IT COMES AGAINST THE BACKDROP OF PRESIDENT TRUMP'S TARIFFS THREATS. ALBANESE WOULD NEED TO WALK A FINE LINE BETWEEN AUSTRALIA'S BIGGEST TRADING PARTNER AND MOST IMPORTANT LONG-TERM SECURITY ALLY. THE THING ABOUT CHINA AND AUSTRALIA IS SO IMPORTANT IS WE BUILD PEOPLE TO PEOPLE RELATIONS. WE DO THAT THROUGH THE PARTICIPATION OF AUSTRALIANS HERE. I HAVE BROUGHT WITH ME A WHOLE RANGE OF BUSINESS PEOPLE FROM THE RESOURCES SECTOR, THE TOURISM SECTOR AND THE EDUCATION SECTOR. LET'S GET IT MORE WHEN IT COMES TO THE EXPECTATIONS FROM THE PRIME MINISTER'S VISIT FROM CHINA. GOOD TO HAVE YOU WITH US. WE HAVE SEEN RELATIONS IMPROVE MARKEDLY COMPARED TO JUST A FEW YEARS AGO. ON THE OTHER HAND, THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT AND THE DEMANDS WHEN IT COMES TO DIPLOMATIC FINESSE AND BALANCE ARE MORE CHALLENGING THAN EVER. HOW FINE IS THE LINE THAT THE PRIME MINISTER HAS TO TREAD ON THIS VISIT GIVEN THE AMOUNT OF DIPLOMATIC DEPTH REQUIRED? IT'S A VERY FINE LINE BUT AT THE SAME TIME THIS VISIT IS HAPPENING IN A CONTEXT WHERE BOTH SIDES WANT A SUCCESSFUL VISIT. THE CHAOS OF THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION IS GIVING BEIJING AN OPPORTUNITY TO PLAY THE CON LEADER AND WELCOME AUSTRALIA AFTER A FEW YEARS OF RELATIONSHIP TURMOIL. THE EMPHASIS IS ON ECONOMICS AND JOBS. THE AGENDA IS VERY MUCH ENABLED BY A STRONG TRADING RELATIONSHIP WITH CHINA. SO I THINK BOTH SIDES WANT TO ACCENTUATE THE POSITIVE ALBEIT IN THE CONTEXT OF SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCES ON OTHER ISSUES. HOW THORNY ARE SOME OF THE REGIONAL GEOPOLITICAL ISSUES BE AT ANY SORT OF CLARIFICATION ON CANBERRA'S POSITIONING ON TAIWAN, WHICH THE PRIME MINISTER DID GIVE, BUT ALSO CONCERNS OVER WHAT WAS VIEWED AS BEIJING'S OVERREACH IN THE SOUTH CHINA SEA , THE PACIFIC AND SOME OF THE ISLANDS. AS YOU SAY, THERE ARE A RANGE OF ISSUES. WE HAVE SEEN THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION PUT PRESSURE ON AUSTRALIA TO CLARIFY ITS POSITION ON TAIWAN AND THE PRIME MINISTER AND OTHER POLITICAL LEADERS HAVE DONE A GOOD JOB OF BATTING THAT ONE AWAY AND REITERATING THE POSITION THAT IT SUPPORTS THE STATUS QUO AND WILL NOT ENTERTAIN HYPOTHETICALS THAT IS A REASONABLE POSITION EVERYONE WOULD EXPECT. ON BROADER GEOPOLITICAL ISSUES, BOTH SIDES HAVE THEIR POSITIONS. THEY ARE WELL UNDERSTOOD AND WILL BE RAISED BUT I DON'T EXPECT THEY WILL BE A MAJOR SOURCE OF IRRITATION. MORE LIKELY IS THAT SPECIFIC BILATERAL DISPUTES THE COUNTRIES HAVE, LIKE THE DARWIN PORT LEASE, WHICH THE PRIME MINISTER PROMISED TO CANCEL MY CAUSE MORE IRRITATION WHEN THE LEADERS MEET. WHAT YOU SEE IN A SHIFTING IN POSITION? IT SEEMS UNLIKELY THAT BOTH WANT TO HAVE A POSITIVE TRIP AS WELL. BOTH SIDES UNDERSTAND THEY ARE REQUIRED TO VENTILATE THEIR GRIEVANCES. THERE'S AN EXPECTATION AMONG THE PUBLIC AND MEDIA THAT WE WILL RAISE SOME OF OUR DISPUTES. THE PLIGHT OF A DEMOCRACY ACTIVIST WHO IS IN JAIL IN CHINA, OUR CONCERN ABOUT CHINA'S MILITARY BUILDUP AND THE LACK OF TRANSPARENCY. SO THESE THINGS ARE REQUIRED TO BE SAID. BUT IS THERE AN EXPECTATION THAT AUSTRALIA CAN MOVE CHINA ON THESE ISSUES? PROBABLY NOT. AND SO BOTH SIDES WILL GO THROUGH THE MOTIONS ON THESE DISPUTES BUT TRY TO SHIFT THINGS TO A POSITIVE AGENDA AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE. ONE THING THAT WILL ALSO COME UP IS ON THE ECONOMIC SIDE. WE HAVE SEEN SOME MOU'S ORDEALS BEING SIGNED BUT THERE IS THE KEY STICKING POINT OF CHINA WANTING MORE ACCESS TO THE AUSTRALIAN ECONOMY THAT MAY CANBERRA IS ALSO NOT WILLING TO HAND OVER. THIS IS A REALLY INTERESTING EVOLUTION IN THE ECONOMIC RELATIONSHIP BECAUSE FOR A LONG TIME AUSTRALIA WAS ABLE TO ENJOY WHAT I WOULD CALL ARM'S-LENGTH TRADE WITH CHINA. WE CAN SELL RESOURCES AND FOOD. BUT THESE TRANSACTIONS ARE NOT VERY INTIMATE. THEY DON'T INVOLVE AN ONGOING RELATIONSHIP. WHAT CHINA WANTS IS MORE DIRECT INVOLVEMENT IN THE AUSTRALIAN ECONOMY. WE HAVE ALSO SEEN CHINA'S AMBASSADOR TO AUSTRALIA SAY THAT PERHAPS ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE BEING LOOTED IN THE FREE TRADE -- BEING INCLUDED IN THE FREE TRADE AGREEMENT. THIS BRINGS BACK MEMORIES OF CHUCK -- OF US TRULY BEING THE FIRST COMPANY TO BAN HUAWEI. WE ARE NOT VERY TRUSTING OF CHINA'S TECHNOLOGY AND PREFER TO KEEP SENSITIVE INVESTMENTS IN MINERALS OUT OF CHINESE CONTROL AS WELL FOR A WHOLE HOST OF REASONS AND I THINK THAT IS THE REAL STICKING POINT, THAT DESIRE FOR A MORE INTIMATE ECONOMIC RELATIONSHIP AND A TIGHTER EMBRACE FROM BEIJING THAT WOULD POTENTIALLY LEAD TO MORE INFLUENCE DOWN THE TRACK. WE HAVE SEEN COMMENTS ABOUT THIS. DO YOU THINK THE STRATEGIC ISSUE OF RARE EARTHS, AUSTRALIA'S OPPORTUNITY AND THE STRANGLEHOLD IS LIKELY TO BECOME A CONTENTIOUS BILATERAL ISSUE? IT IS HARD TO SAY WITH CERTAINTY. AUSTRALIA HAS GOT SIGNIFICANT INTEREST IN DEVELOPING PROCESSING CAPACITY AND SEES A GREAT OPPORTUNITY TO CONTRIBUTE TO THE FRIEND-SHORING INITIATIVE OF THE U.S. AND OTHER PARTNERS. AT THE SAME TIME WE DO NEED U.S. TECHNOLOGY AND THEY REMAIN THE WORLD LEADER. SO THERE ARE BOTH OPPORTUNITIES AND RISKS IN THIS SECTOR. I DON'T EXPECT THIS TO PLAY A SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN THIS PARTICULAR MEETING BUT IT WILL BE AN ONGOING IRRITANT AND ALSO SOURCE OF POTENTIAL GROWTH INTO THE FUTURE. THANK YOU FOR JOINING US. THAT WAS DARREN, A SENIOR LECTURER IN THE SCHOOL OF POLITICS AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AT AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL UNIVERSITY. WE WILL HAVE MORE ON AUSTRALIA AHEAD EVERY TUESDAY AT 10:40 A.M. IN SYDNEY, 8:40 A.M. IN HONG KONG. YOU CAN TUNE INTO THE BLOOMBERG AUSTRALIA PODCAST, WHICH TELLS INTO THE BIGGEST STORIES.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
EU Targets Bourbon, Cars, Boeing in Countermeasures List
00:00 The European Union has finalized a list of counter measures to target U.S. goods worth €72 billion, including cars, Bourbon and Boeing aircraft. The measures represent the EU's response to President Trump's earlier so-called reciprocal tariffs. Bloomberg's demand news director, Charles Manson, is here with the details. Ross, what do we know then about the EU's countermeasures? Well, as you were saying, though, finalize this list of countermeasures. This is actually cut down from the initial list, which was over €90 billion. But it does include some essential items, including targeting Boeing, particularly the aircraft side, but then everything from medical equipment to plastics to agricultural equipment to musical equipment. It doesn't include military equipment, which should not be subject to any tariffs from the EU. But it is about sending a message to the U.S. that the European Union is prepared with very specific measures targeting certain U.S. goods in the event that this all disintegrates and there isn't a deal before the 1st of August. And some of these items that they're targeting very much with with an eye to the US midterm elections, even you're thinking about bourbon. Some of the states where bourbon comes from in the U.S., can they be key states in the US midterm elections for those companies and therefore for Republican politicians as well? And the message in all of this is that the EU wants to keep negotiating. Certainly we're seeing that happen. The impetus is to try and get a deal. They do want to avoid a broader trade conflict with the US. Certainly European companies want to avoid a broader trade conflict with the US. However, they're warning the US we are prepared. We have a specific list of things we're going to enact if we have to. We need to have all options on the table. What are the current expectations, Roz, that maybe there is a deal by August the first between the EU and between Washington? Well, the climate's become a bit trickier because Donald Trump keeps referring, excuse me, to his letters as deals. These are not deals. This is the US imposing a tariff rate on countries or blocs including the EU, and negotiating in that climate is quite difficult because you're trying to address very complex issues, not just tariffs, but non-tariff barriers that are seen as existing to trade, very complex conversations going on about sectors for the EU, steel, aluminum, cars, you name it. And so you need to have a bit of a climate of trust going on there. I mean, Donald Trump said yesterday he's willing to keep talking with the EU. Certainly, we know that the chief negotiator was on the phone last night with the US commerce secretary. So those conversations are going on, but they're getting to a deadline now of August the first. That's the fresh deadline and there's a lot it seems to wade through. And so the EU is quite wisely saying, well, we have to have a lot of issues in our back pocket, including these potential countermeasures.

Politico
an hour ago
- Politico
Megabill may not be a silver bullet for Democrats in the midterms
That's leaving some Democrats concerned that their Medicaid-focused messaging might not hit home before November 2026 — and blunt their efforts to use the backlash to President Donald Trump's signature legislative achievement to fuel a Democratic wave next year. 'I do [worry about it],' said Cherlynn Stevenson, a former Kentucky state representative running for the congressional seat being vacated by GOP Rep. Andy Barr. 'I think that there are some people who are like, 'Well, I'm not on Medicaid, so it's not going to affect me.'' But Democrats are still forging ahead with making Republicans' Medicaid reductions a central theme of their midterms messaging. Many have already dusted off the playbook they deployed in the 2018 midterms, when Democrats picked up dozens of House seats after running against Republicans' near-repeal of the Affordable Care Act and massive tax cuts. This cycle, Democrats have eyed redder seats in Kentucky, Florida and Virginia as they try to push into GOP-held territory. That's in part because, though most of the pain was put off as long as possible, some of the effects — like on rural hospitals that have to budget on longer timelines — could be felt sooner. The seat Stevenson is aiming to win in rural Kentucky has a half-dozen hospitals that could potentially face funding disruptions that serve nearly 200,000 Medicaid enrollees. Democrats are embarking on a series of roundtables in the state to discuss the ramifications of Republicans' health care cuts. But they know the effects will be more tangible if the cuts were already here. 'We will need to remind voters that the impact is going to kind of come in waves, and that a lot of the brunt of the damage won't be felt until next year, or even after the midterms,' Stevenson said. 'We just will have to remind them that provisions of the bill are still coming, that deadlines are looming.' But the bulk of the health care cuts Republicans built into their megabill — including reductions to the so-called provider tax many states use to help fund their Medicaid programs and new work requirements that could cost millions of people their coverage — won't kick in until after the midterms. Republicans have signaled they'll use the popular parts of the legislation like a tax deduction on tips to go on offense against Democrats. NRCC spokesperson Mike Marinella said Democrats were using 'desperate and disgusting fear-mongering tactics' and added the GOP would 'use every tool to show voters that the provisions in this bill are widely popular.' Polling shows voters are receiving mixed messages on Medicaid. A tracking survey from nonprofit health policy group KFF shows 63 percent of independents said they believe the bill will strip health care coverage from people who need it, but they also broadly support adding work requirements to the program. 'If Republicans are able to characterize these changes as simply fraud and waste, there may not be as drastic political implications,' said Ashley Kirzinger, associate director of KFF's Public Opinion and Survey Research Program. Another potential pitfall for Democrats: States use different names for the Medicaid programs — Medi-Cal in California, SoonerCare in Oklahoma, Health First Colorado — that could leave some voters unaware that the cuts are from national Republicans. Democrats will get a trial run for their Medicaid messaging in this year's gubernatorial races in New Jersey and Virginia. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, New Jersey Democrats' nominee to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, has attacked her opponent for being ' fully on board ' with Republican cuts, and argued that New Jersey is ' the first chance to hold them accountable at the ballot box.' Laura Matos, a Democratic strategist in New Jersey, noted that Republicans are 'counting on people not paying attention' to the impact of the bill, but also warned Democrats not to get too bogged down in national issues. 'For Mikie, it's this nebulous thing,' she said. 'You can talk about national issues, but what she really needs to do is pivot to the things she's going to do here to improve affordability and quality of life.' But other Democrats are brushing aside concerns that voters won't register the impacts of the bill, pointing to substantial news coverage of its cuts to Medicaid and the more immediate changes to Affordable Care Act tax credits that could dramatically increase some Americans' health insurance costs. 'It's the same cynical backdoor bullshit that we always see in Washington,' said Rebecca Cooke, who's running in a purple district in Wisconsin. 'The message, honestly, is going to be coming from voters themselves as these cuts hit.' Republicans may also tweak their Medicaid language before it's fully implemented. Some GOP lawmakers who voted for the megabill are already pushing to stop some of the harsher provisions — like changes to the provider tax that could have an adverse effect on rural hospitals — from taking effect. 'If Republicans don't want to be accused of cutting Medicaid, it's probably a good idea not to cut Medicaid,' Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) said Wednesday at the Capitol. But Democrats are committed to hammering Republicans over the vote no matter what. 'People are not stupid,' said former Iowa State Rep. Christina Bohannan, who's mounting a rematch. 'People are aware of what's going on, and so we just have to make sure that people understand what's going to happen here, and to hold people accountable for these votes.'