logo
US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media

US Congress approves $9 bn in Trump cuts to foreign aid, public media

France 243 days ago
The cuts achieve only a tiny fraction of the $1 trillion in annual savings that tech billionaire and estranged Trump donor Elon Musk vowed to find before his acrimonious exit in May from a role spearheading federal cost-cutting.
But Republicans -- who recently passed a domestic policy bill expected to add more than $3 trillion to US debt -- said the vote honored Trump's election campaign pledge to rein in runaway spending.
"President Trump and House Republicans promised fiscal responsibility and government efficiency," House Speaker Mike Johnson said in a statement just after the vote.
"Today, we're once again delivering on that promise."
Both chambers of Congress are Republican-controlled, meaning a mostly party-line House of Representatives vote of 216 to 213, moments after midnight, was sufficient to approve the Senate-passed measure.
The bill now heads to the White House to be signed by Trump, who praised his backers in the House.
"REPUBLICANS HAVE TRIED DOING THIS FOR 40 YEARS, AND FAILED... BUT NO MORE. THIS IS BIG!!!" he wrote on Truth Social.
Most of the cuts target programs for countries hit by disease, war and natural disasters. But the move also scraps $1.1 billion that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting was due to receive over the next two years.
Conservatives say the funding -- which goes mostly to more than 1,500 local public radio and TV stations, as well as to public broadcasters NPR and PBS -- is unnecessary and has funded biased coverage.
The bill originally included $400 million in cuts to a global AIDS program that is credited with saving 26 million lives, but that funding was saved by a rebellion by moderate Republicans.
'Dark day'
The vote was a win for Trump and fiscal hawks seeking to support the mission of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), launched by Musk as Trump was swept to power, for radical savings.
Congress had already approved the cash that was clawed back, and Democrats framed the bill as a betrayal of the bipartisan government funding process.
They fear Trump's victory clears the way for more "rescissions packages" canceling agreed spending.
"Instead of protecting the health, safety and well-being of the American people, House Republicans have once again rubber stamped Donald Trump's extreme, reckless rescissions legislation," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said in a joint statement with fellow top Democrats.
Republicans need some Democratic votes to keep the government funded past September, and the minority party had threatened to abandon any plans for cooperation if the DOGE cuts went ahead.
Jeffries and fellow Democrats seemed to suggest as much on Friday.
"Tonight's vote... makes it clear that House Republicans are determined to march this country toward a painful government shutdown later this year," they said in the statement.
Although they are in the minority, Democrats have leverage in funding fights because a budget deal would need at least 60 votes in the 100-member Senate and Republicans only have 53 seats.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called it "a dark day for any American who relies on public broadcasting during floods, hurricanes, tornadoes, and other disasters."
White House budget chief Russell Vought told an event hosted Thursday by the Christian Science Monitor that the administration was likely to send another rescissions package to Congress.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

That video said to show Trump selecting a young girl at an Epstein party? It's AI
That video said to show Trump selecting a young girl at an Epstein party? It's AI

France 24

time3 hours ago

  • France 24

That video said to show Trump selecting a young girl at an Epstein party? It's AI

'The looks on the girls' faces. Holding hands in anticipation of the worst,' read a caption on a video that was posted online on July 13. The footage shows US President Donald Trump pointing at one of two young girls standing before him. The implication is that he is selecting her to have sexual relations with him, which would constitute a crime. The president appears to be making his sordid choice in the presence of Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime companion of Jeffrey Epstein, an American financier who was found dead in his cell in 2019 while facing charges of sex trafficking of minors. Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison for helping provide Epstein with these girls. This video appeared online at a moment when Trump is being criticised by his own supporters for how he has managed the Epstein affair. During his 2024 presidential campaign, Trump promised to make sensational revelations about the financier, including publishing a list of clients of Epstein's prostitution ring, whom he allegedly blackmailed. Since then, the president has been trying to backtrack on his promises. The US Justice Department published a memo on July 7 claiming that no 'incriminating client list' had been discovered. 'There was also no credible evidence found that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals as part of his actions,' the memo reads. An AI video created from a real photo The video, however, is fake. We ran it through a reverse image search (learn how by using our handy guide). It seems as if it was based on a real photo published by the British tabloid The Sun. This image shows Trump next to Ghislaine Maxwell. There's also a third person in the image, but you can only see part of their hair in the video. The rest of the video, where you can see the young girls, was entirely created by AI. There are a few clues that helped us determine this. First of all, the wall is grey in the original photo but blue in the video. The door to the right in the original photo is gone in the video. And there are no children in the original photo. We ran the image through InVID-We verify, a tool that helps identify deepfakes. It concluded that the image of the young girls in the video is 94% likely to be AI-generated. The video is emblematic of a new generation of deep fakes that have appeared in recent months. To make them more convincing, fake videos have been generated from real photos using AI, which makes them harder to detect as their details are closer to reality. To verify them, you have to find the original photo that it was based on and then look for inconsistencies between the photo and the video. A fake video published by 'BlueAnon' social media users The fake video of Trump seems to have largely been spread by left-leaning social media users. One pro-democratic social media user, for example, accused MAGA activists (Make America Great Again, Trump's slogan) of supporting a 'paedophile rapist' just because 'they thought he would hurt black and brown people more than themselves". BlueAnon encompasses left-leaning conspiracy theories, many of which arose during the 2024 American presidential election. It is a play on the colour 'blue' used to represent Democratic wins on an electoral map and 'QAnon", conspiracy theories championed by Trump supporters. The spread of this video suggests the movement remains active.

UK calls for 50-day drive to arm Ukraine
UK calls for 50-day drive to arm Ukraine

France 24

time3 hours ago

  • France 24

UK calls for 50-day drive to arm Ukraine

Earlier this month, Trump gave Russian President Vladimir Putin 50 days to strike a peace deal with Kyiv in the three-year war or face sanctions. UK Defence Secretary John Healey told a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group (UDCG) that Kyiv's backers stand at a moment of "maximum opportunity". "As members of this UDCG, we need to step up, in turn, a 50-day drive to arm Ukraine on the battlefield and to help push Putin to the negotiating table," Healey told the virtual meeting of 52 nations. Trump also pledged to supply Kyiv with new military aid, sponsored by NATO allies, as its cities suffer ever-increasing Russian aerial attacks since Moscow's 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Healey, chairing the meeting alongside German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius, said the UK "backs this policy". "We will play our full part in its success," he added. Russia has escalated long-range aerial attacks on Ukrainian cities as well as frontline assaults and shelling over recent months, defying Trump's warning. Healey said Britain and Germany have "agreed to partner in providing critical air defence missiles to Ukraine". Pistorius said the two countries would provide 220,000 rounds of 35 millimetre ammunition for anti-aircraft guns used by Ukraine. According to the UK defence ministry, Britain has sent £150 million ($200 million) worth of air defence missiles and artillery rounds to Ukraine in the past two months. The UK has pledged to spend £700 million on air defence and artillery ammunition for Ukraine this year. The commitment is in addition to other funding to provide more of the drones that have become key weapons in the war with Russia. Some 50,000 drones have been delivered to Ukraine in the last six months, with another 20,000 coming from a coalition of nations led by Britain and Latvia. © 2025 AFP

Trump threatens to block NFL D.C. stadium deal unless Commanders revert to 'Redskins' name
Trump threatens to block NFL D.C. stadium deal unless Commanders revert to 'Redskins' name

France 24

time5 hours ago

  • France 24

Trump threatens to block NFL D.C. stadium deal unless Commanders revert to 'Redskins' name

US President Donald Trump threatened on Sunday to interfere with a deal to build a new football stadium in Washington, D.C., unless the local NFL team, now known as the Commanders, changes its name back to Redskins. The American football team dropped the name Redskins in 2020 after decades of criticism that it was a racial slur with links to the US genocide of the Indigenous population. Trump had called for a return to the name Redskins – and for the Cleveland Guardians baseball team to once again adopt the name Indians – on other occasions, but on Sunday he added that he may take official action. "I may put a restriction on them that if they don't change the name back to the original 'Washington Redskins,' and get rid of the ridiculous moniker, 'Washington Commanders,' I won't make a deal for them to build a Stadium in Washington," Trump said in a post on his Truth Social platform. The team moved from Washington to suburban Landover, Maryland, in 1997, but earlier this year reached an agreement with the local District of Columbia government to return to the city with a new stadium expected to open in 2030. Trump has limited authority to intervene under the current home-rule law governing federal oversight of the District of Columbia, but he has raised the prospect of taking more control, telling reporters in February, "I think we should take over Washington, D.C." Representatives of the Commanders did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Some fans have advocated readopting the name Redskins out of tradition, but leading Indigenous rights organisations have opposed the name, including the National Congress of American Indians, the Association on American Indian Affairs, and Cultural Survival. At least one group, the Native American Guardian's Association, has supported the name Redskins and the "respectful use of Native American names and imagery in sports, education and public life".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store