Negotiations underway as House GOP races to get Trump's agenda back on track for Sunday voteNew Foto - Negotiations underway as House GOP races to get Trump's agenda back on track for Sunday vote

Intense negotiations are underway among House Republicans in the leadup to a crucial vote Sunday evening as GOP leadership races to get Trump's sweeping tax and spending cuts bill back on track after an embarrassing setbacklate last week. House Speaker Mike Johnson signaled a potential compromise to get holdouts on board and advance the bill in the House Budget Committee on Sunday , saying that Republicans are working on moving up the timeline for the implementation of work requirements for Medicaid recipients – a key change hardliners are pushing for. "The concern is, what we're trying to work with is the ability of the states to retool their systems and ensure the verification process is to make sure that all the new laws and all the new safeguards are replacing can actually be enforced," he said. "And so we're working through all those details, and we'll get it done." It's a change that South Carolina Rep. Ralph Norman, one of the Republicans who voted against advancing Trump's massive domestic policy bill on Friday, said on Saturday was necessary to get him to support the bill. Accelerating the phase out of tax credits for green energy projects under the Inflation Reduction Act was also among the changes under consideration, he said, noting that the holdouts "absolutely" must get both changes. "Otherwise, we vote no," he added. Norman told CNN that he expects House Budget Committee's chairman Jodey Arrington to offer an amendment during Sunday night's Budget Committee meeting to make some of the changes. Along with Norman, the other Republican holdouts are: Chip Roy of Texas, Josh Brecheen of Oklahoma and Andrew Clyde of Georgia. The bill includes trillions of dollars in tax cuts and a big boost to the US military and to national security — largely paid for by overhauls to federal health and nutrition programs and cuts to energy programs. Making changes to appease hardliners could turn off moderate Republicans — including a number who are worried that phasing out the tax credits could imperil jobs in their districts — and others worried about cuts to Medicaid benefits. Still, two GOP leadership sources also told CNN that signs appeared positive that the bill would get back on track with a vote to advance the bill in the House Budget Committee Sunday night — with the goal of passing the bill out of the narrowly divided House later this week. Trump, GOP sources said, was not directly involved in Saturday's talks but White House officials were. Meanwhile, a group of swing-district House Republicans are seeking to raise the tax rate on top earners in order to offset the cost of lifting the cap on how much their constituents can deduct in their state and local taxes, known as SALT. Hardliners have warned they won't agree to increasing the SALT cap if it isn't paid for. "Allowing the top tax rate to expire and returning from 37% to 39.6% for individuals earning $609,350 or more and married couples earning $731,200 or more breathes $300 billion of new life into the One Big, Beautiful Bill," Rep. Nick LaLota of New York told CNN on Saturday. CNN's Manu Raju, Aileen Graef, and Lauren Fox contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Negotiations underway as House GOP races to get Trump’s agenda back on track for Sunday vote

Negotiations underway as House GOP races to get Trump's agenda back on track for Sunday vote Intense negotiations are underway among Hou...
Austria grappling with venue, funding for next Eurovision Song ContestNew Foto - Austria grappling with venue, funding for next Eurovision Song Contest

By Francois Murphy VIENNA (Reuters) - The Austrian government and national broadcaster ORF are grappling with where to host the next Eurovision Song Contest and how to cover the cost, officials said on Sunday after their country's entry won the competition for the third time. Apart from jubilation at the resounding victory overnight of "Wasted Love" by 24-year-old operatic singer Johannes Pietsch, known as JJ, much of the public discussion in Austria has been about the tens of millions of euros hosting the event will cost. The contest's final in Basel, Switzerland, came days after Austria's new centrist coalition government presented a budget dominated by belt-tightening measures. As the country heads towards a third year of recession, its budget deficit has grown well beyond the European Union's limit of 3% of economic output. Asked by his own broadcaster how the cost of the event would be covered, ORF chief Roland Weissmann said: "If I had a perfect answer today, that would be a bit like witchcraft. But in the days before (the final) when there was a chance we would win, we did start thinking about it." "We are in intensive discussions with Austrian officialdom," he said, adding that there would be a "transparent process" to determine where the contest would be held. Vienna, by far the country's largest city, hosted the event 10 years ago after Conchita Wurst won with "Rise Like a Phoenix". Weissmann said many other cities and communities had already expressed an interest. Speaking on ORF moments after Weissmann, Vice Chancellor Andreas Babler of the Social Democrats, who is also culture minister, was guarded, saying only that "serious discussions" were underway. JJ has said he would like the contest to be held in Vienna, his hometown. He also told ORF he had some other requests, including hosting the event himself. "I would like to fly into the opening ceremony. That would be great. But we still have to discuss that," JJ said, adding that it would be similar to the official video of his song in which he appears to float in the air. Official discussions on funding are likely to focus on how the Austrian share of the costs should be spread between entities like ORF, the government and the host city or state. According to the Eurovision Song Contest's website, the event is mainly funded by participating broadcasters' fees, contributions by the host broadcaster and host city as well as revenue from items like sponsorship deals, ticket sales and public voting for songs. While hosting the event is at odds with the government's savings drive, there is little doubt that funding will be available, and ministers have also looked on the lighter side. Finance Minister Markus Marterbauer posted overnight on Instagram a satirical website's headline that said to avoid the cost of hosting the next contest he had voted for the favorite, Sweden, 3,000 times. His caption: "It wasn't enough..." (Reporting by Francois Murphy; Editing by Paul Simao)

Austria grappling with venue, funding for next Eurovision Song Contest

Austria grappling with venue, funding for next Eurovision Song Contest By Francois Murphy VIENNA (Reuters) - The Austrian government and na...
What Is Anti-Natalism? The Controversial Movement Against Having ChildrenNew Foto - What Is Anti-Natalism? The Controversial Movement Against Having Children

In the first few days after Donald Trump's election in November 2024, purchases ofemergency contraceptives spiked, with two companies reporting sales about 1,000 percent higher than the preceding week. Meanwhile, Planned Parenthood reported a 760 percentincrease in appointments for IUDsthe day after his win. Many Americans are fearful that the incoming administrationcould further curb reproductive rights, 2.5 years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the constitutional right to abortion. Today, roughly one-third of statesban the procedurealmost entirely or after the first six weeks of pregnancy — before many women and girlsrealize that they're pregnant. Several nomineesfor Trump's second administrationoppose abortion rights. But some of his allies have suggested that not having children is itself a moral failing. Ina 2019 speech, for example, VP J.D. Vance said that people "become more attached to their communities, to their families, to their country because they have children." In 2021,he tweetedthat low birth rates "have made many elites sociopaths." During a Trump rally in 2024, Arkansas Gov.Sarah Huckabee Sanders said her childrenare a "permanent reminder of what's important" and "keep me humble." Kamala Harris — who has two stepchildren, but no biological children — "doesn't have anything keeping her humble," Sanders said. Beyond politics, many people hold similar views. People fromNew York TimescolumnistRoss DouthattoPope Francishave described decreasing birth rates as a sign of self-centered cultures. Plenty of childless people want children but can't have them. Other people may not want kids for personal or economic reasons. But advocates for "anti-natalism," a relatively new social movement, arguegiving birth is immoral. Theanti-natalists I've interviewedpush back against the idea that childlessness is selfishness. They believe they are protecting their unborn children, not neglecting them: that childlessness is the ethical choice. In the 1970s, the word "anti-natalism" referred to policies designed to reduce a country's fertility rate, such as thecampaign to sterilize millions of menin India during the state of emergency from 1975 to 1977. Such policies were designed to addressconcerns of overpopulationand poverty, spurred in part by growing environmental awareness. In the following decades, niche environmental movements such asthe Voluntary Human Extinction Movementwere influenced by this trend and encouraged people to stop having childrenfor the sake of the planet. However, anti-natalism first came to denote a moral philosophy in 2006, when two key books were published:The Art of Guillotining Procreators, by Belgian activist Théophile de Giraud, andBetter Never to Have Been, by South African philosopherDavid Benatar. Rather than emphasize the damage new humans cause to the planet, this new anti-natalism emphasizes the harm life brings to the unborn. By not having children, these philosophers argue, people help the unborn avoid the inherent painfulness of life. The unborn cannot experience life's pleasures, either — but asBenatar writes, "those who never exist cannot be deprived." Anti-natalism took off among a collection of online communities but reached a broader audience in 2019, when Raphael Samuel, a Mumbai businessman, attempted tosue his parentsfor giving birth to him without his consent. The stunt sparked public conversation about the ethics of procreation and prompted the formation of the activist groupChildfree India. Various anti-natalist groups have formed across the globe since, includinga subredditwith about 230,000 members.Stop Having Kids, founded in the U.S. in March 2021, hashosted demonstrationsspanning Canada, Bangladesh, and Poland. That same year, Asagi Hozumi and Yuichi Furuno createdAntinatalism Japanand have been holding frequent outreach events in Tokyo since 2023. In early 2024, an Israeli activist named Nimrod Harel planned aEuropean tour to promote anti-natalismin more than 30 cities. Criticism of anti-natalists comes in many different flavors. Most frequently, however, anti-natalists complain that they are called selfish: that critics assume they are prioritizing their own freedom over raising the next generation. "I never understood people who say 'not having children is selfish,'" one anti-natalist wrote in their community group chat. "Name me one reason you are (having children) for the child's sake." Deciding not to have childrencan be motivated by a desire for freedom and self-actualization, but it doesn't have to be. Often, among the anti-natalist online communities I study, the point of not having children is precisely to protect them. Shyama, an anti-natalist from Bengaluru, India, used to teach low-income children. After witnessing the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on her students, she hopes to pivot toward a career in mental health research for children and adolescents. She speaks about her own children, but only in hypothetical terms, having vowed not to have kids. When she reads about bad news, she feels relieved that her children never have to suffer like that. She refuses birth for their sake. When her friends accused her of challenging other people's right to have a child, she told me that "this was less unfair than bringing another life into this world and imposing an entire lifetime of inevitable suffering on it." Some critics respond that having childrengives parents a stake in the future. PhilosopherSamuel Scheffler, for instance, argues that having children personalizes the future, anchoring parents to a community thatextends beyond their own lifetimes. Anti-natalists, however, refuse to equate children with a stake in the future. Anugraha Kumar, a Marxist anti-natalist, told me that most leaders within the Communist Party of India are childless. Without needing to support a family, they are free to fight for a better future. Throughout history, catastrophic events have provoked reflection about the ethics of reproduction. After the Holocaust and the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,Jewishand Japanesewriters documented some survivors' apprehensions about giving birth. According toanthropologist Jade Sasser, anxieties about climate change, the economy and political turmoil have fueled current questions aboutwhether to have a family. But I have argued that this narrativedownplays deeper shiftsin how many modern societies understand birth. Traditionally, birth was often considered entwined with religion: something predestined, or even shaped by divine intervention. In many of the societies where anti-natalist groups have formed, however, parents have far more control over whether to give birth, when and to whom – and birth is viewed in a more secular way. Birth is less often viewed as part of divine order but often likened to a lottery: a game of chance where parents roll the die and their children suffer the consequences. Japanese anti-natalists, for example, sometimescompare their birth to "gachapon": vending machines that spit out a toy at random each time someone inserts money. Parents choose to "spin the wheel of life," an anti-natalist from Philadelphia told me, without knowing what kind of life they will create. Without a way to acquire consent from the unborn, he added, "This is not a risk that is ours to take." This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article. The postWhat Is Anti-Natalism? The Controversial Movement Against Having Childrenappeared first onKatie Couric Media.

What Is Anti-Natalism? The Controversial Movement Against Having Children

What Is Anti-Natalism? The Controversial Movement Against Having Children In the first few days after Donald Trump's election in Novembe...
Republican US Congress to try again on Trump tax cuts, Bessent dismisses credit downgradeNew Foto - Republican US Congress to try again on Trump tax cuts, Bessent dismisses credit downgrade

By Susan Heavey WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Republican-controlled U.S. Congress on Sunday sought to push forward with President Donald Trump's sweeping tax-cut bill, as one of his top economic officials dismissed Moody's decision to strip the federal government of its top-tier credit rating. A handful of hardline Republicans blocked the bill from clearing an important procedural hurdle on Friday, saying it did not cut spending sharply enough, with the House of Representatives set to try again in a rare Sunday-night committee session. Nonpartisan analysts say the bill, which would extend the 2017 tax cuts that were Trump's signature first-term legislative win, would add $3 trillion to $5 trillion to the nation's $36.2 trillion in debt over the next decade. Moody's cited the rising debt, which it said was on track to reach 134% of GDP by 2035, for its downgrade decision. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent dismissed the cut's significance in a pair of Sunday television interviews, saying the bill would spur economic growth that would outpace what the nation owed. "I don't put much credence in the Moody's" downgrade, Bessent told CNN's "State of the Union" program, echoing White House criticism. Economic experts, meanwhile, warn the downgrade from the last of the three major credit agencies was a clear sign that the U.S. has too much debt and should prompt lawmakers to either increase revenue or spend less. Congressional Republicans in 2017 also argued that the tax cuts would pay for themselves by stimulating economic growth. But the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates the changes increased the federal deficit by just under $1.9 trillion over a decade, even when including positive economic effects. House of Representatives Speaker Mike Johnson on Sunday said the chamber is still "on track" to pass the bill, which the House Budget Committee plans to vote on in a 10 p.m. ET (0200 GMT Monday) hearing. "We've had lots of conversations. We'll have more today," Johnson said on "Fox News Sunday with Shannon Bream" when asked about hard-line Republicans, including Representatives Chip Roy of Texas and Ralph Norman of South Carolina, demanding more spending cuts. MEDICAID CUTS EYED Trump's Republicans hold a 220-213 majority in the House and are divided over how deeply to slash spending to offset the cost of the tax cuts. Hardliners want cuts to the Medicaid health insurance program, a move that moderates and some Republican senators have pushed back against, saying it would hurt the very voters who elected Trump in November, and whose support they will need in 2026, when control of Congress is again up for grabs. The bill's cuts would kick 8.6 million people off Medicaid, the joint federal-state program for low-income Americans. It also aims to eliminate taxes on tips and some overtime income —both Trump campaign promises — while also boosting defense spending and providing more funds for Trump's border crackdown. Republicans are also at odds over the deductibility of state and local taxes, or SALT, an issue of great significance to a handful of incumbents from states such as New York and California that are critical to the party's narrow House majority. Moody's downgrade, coming amid ongoing economic uncertainty over Trump's tariffs that have already roiled global markets, could further rattle investors when Wall Street re-opens on Monday. Trump and his administration have vowed to balance the budget since the Republican president took office again in January. But his attempts to cut government spending through Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency have fallen far short of its goals. It also remains unclear what revenue would be raised through tariffs as Trump swings between imposing higher rates and cutting deals. Johnson said the downgrade showed the need for the tax bill. "Moody's is not incorrect," Johnson said. "We're talking about historic spending cuts. I mean, this will help to change the trajectory for the U.S. economy." He aims for the bill to pass the House this week, ahead of the May 26 Memorial Day holiday. Lawmakers face a far harder deadline later this summer, when they will need to address the U.S. debt ceiling or trigger a potentially catastrophic default. Democratic U.S. Senator Chris Murphy of Connecticut said the credit rating cut spelled trouble for Americans. "That is a big deal. That means that we are likely headed for a recession," Murphy told NBC's "Meet the Press." "That probably means higher interest rates for anybody out there who is trying to start a business or to buy a home. These guys are running the economy recklessly." (Additional reporting by Katharine Jackson, David Morgan and Davide Barbuscia; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Berkrot)

Republican US Congress to try again on Trump tax cuts, Bessent dismisses credit downgrade

Republican US Congress to try again on Trump tax cuts, Bessent dismisses credit downgrade By Susan Heavey WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Republic...
Dems' hearing meltdowns a play to the base, analysts say, as Trump noms keep pushing back in viral momentsNew Foto - Dems' hearing meltdowns a play to the base, analysts say, as Trump noms keep pushing back in viral moments

PresidentDonald Trump's nominees consistently engage with Democrats who challenge them in increasingly viral hearing moments that analysts say are not intended as gifts to the media, but red meat for their base. The media understands Democrats have little power on a Republican-dominated Capitol Hill, according to Bill D'Agostino, senior analyst for the Media Research Center. "If you were to watch any given night on CNN or MSNBC evening shows, you'll find a couple of panel discussion segments that are basically just Democratic strategists and the host talking shop," he told Fox News Digital in a Thursday interview. "The discussion has focused almost entirely on how can Democrats show their voters that they're trying to fight this, that they're trying to make a difference, that they're resisting the Trump administration." White House Press Secretary Defends Trump's Firing Of Inspectors General Partisan politics has come to a point, D'Agostino suggested, where constituents send Democrats to Washington to stop Trump at every turn, regardless of ideological alignment or differences. Read On The Fox News App "Obviously, as the minority party, there's not much action they can actually offer. So instead, their political futures basically rest on how hard they're trying to stop Trump." One of the most contentious exchanges occurred during FBI DirectorKash Patel'sJanuary confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Sen.Adam Schiff, D-Calif., dug into granular language used by Patel after the Capitol riot in regard to a song released by inmates that featured Trump reciting the Pledge of Allegiance. Patel told Schiff he stood by prior testimony that he had had nothing to do with the recording of the song, while the Burbank Democrat grilled him over a comment to former Trump adviser Stephen Bannon about "what we thought would be cool… captur[ing] audio" for the song. Schiff asked why he said that, and Patel incredulously shot back "that's why it says, 'we' [as opposed to I] as you highlighted." Patel denied participating in the digitizing of the song. The exchange was compared to former President Bill Clinton's grammatical comments about the word "is" during the Monica Lewinsky affair. During Attorney GeneralPam Bondi'sconfirmation, Schiff was at the fore again, demanding she disclose whether she might prosecute former special counsel Jack Smith over his Trump probe. Bondi repeatedly said she wouldn't answer hypothetical, anddinged Schiff in responsefor focusing on Smith while his own California is rife with violent crime. Bondi also snapped back at Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., after a grilling on the Fourteenth Amendment and citizenship, saying, "I'm not here to do your homework and study for you." During Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's hearing, Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., delved into Hegseth's multiple marriages and allegations of untoward behavior. Kaine said Hegseth had "casually cheated" on a former wife shortly after his daughter Gwendolyn was born. Hegseth countered that the situation had been investigated and that Kaine's claims were "false charges." "You've admitted that you had sex at that hotel in October 2017. You said it was consensual, isn't that correct?" Kaine went on, probing further. Bondi Announces One Of Largest Fentanyl Seizures In Us History Hegseth also made headlines when he interrupted Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., mid-sentence as she criticized the revolving door among military generals, Pentagon chiefs, and defense contractors. "I'm not a general, senator," he said, prompting laughter in the gallery. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., also had several similar moments, including when Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., opened his remarks by speaking about the measles and telling the nominee bluntly, "You frighten people." Kennedy also rejected a line of questioning from Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Ga., claiming that he had compared the Atlanta-based CDC's work to Nazi death camps. Outbursts and grilling continued in recent oversight hearings, including this past week when Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., got into a tiff with DHS Secretary Kristi Noem about Salvadorandeportee Kilmar Garcia. At one point, Swalwell informed Noem he has a "bull---t detector." Mark Bednar, a former top aide to ex-House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was one of many "sherpas" tasked with guiding nominees through the confirmation process, including meetings with senators. Bednar assisted EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin through his process, which, by comparison to others, was mild. Zeldin's hearing actually included some bipartisan joking – like when Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., riffed that Zeldin's cell phone rang unexpectedly because "the fossil fuel industry" was calling him after a line of questioning on the matter. Swalwell Warns Noem He Has A 'Bulls---' Detector During Heated Exchange About Abrego Garcia Bednar recounted a loud protester in the hall who remained for some time, offering conjecture that the disruptive woman hadn't yet crossed any legal lines like protesters actually inside hearing rooms like during Kennedy's confirmation. But Bednar said that many of the other nominees faced Democrats who would rather make a show than "be diplomatic and deliberative over policy." "I think that is a big indicator to me that the left has no substantive answers for rebuttals to President Trump's agenda or Republicans' agenda. And that, to me, is a sign that if you're a Republican, that that's encouraging -- the public's on your side, and the far left has been unable to formulate a rational, level-headed response, much less not even be able to articulate one." Fox News Digital reached out to other sherpas but did not hear back. Meanwhile, Bednar said that it has been interesting to watch the hearing disruptions evolve into larger scenes with similarly little substance or long-term gain. "I thought I was very rich and pun intended, that Cory Booker delivered a record-breaking speech that the Democrats were basically just grasping for anything to kind of count as a win, even though it didn't really amount to anything," he said, after the New Jersey Democrat held an unofficial filibuster – as there was no legislation being held up – for more than a day. That speech, however, precipitated several fundraising emails from the left, Bednar said, which bolstered D'Agostino's claim about playing to the base. "If it's a session day in D.C., and Republicans are in charge, there's going to be liberal agitators protesting; as the sky is blue," Bednar quipped. Fox News Digital reached out to Schiff for comment but did not receive a response by press time. Original article source:Dems' hearing meltdowns a play to the base, analysts say, as Trump noms keep pushing back in viral moments

Dems’ hearing meltdowns a play to the base, analysts say, as Trump noms keep pushing back in viral moments

Dems' hearing meltdowns a play to the base, analysts say, as Trump noms keep pushing back in viral moments PresidentDonald Trump's n...

 

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