6 months ago
Senate votes should start at 11:20 am
The Senate is expected to start a series of votes at 11:20 am which will include procedural motions on the advancement of democrats and republicans to finance the government, according to a Whip Office of the majority John Barrasso.
11 minutes ago
Hegseth criticizes Schumer about the military wages
Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth criticized the leader of the Schumer senatorial minority in an article on X, stressing that Wednesday marks a week before October 15, when the military in active service should miss their next pay check unless the legislators vote to reopen the government.
“Towers 7 days before the closure of @Senschumer for vanity means that our large troops will not be paid,” said HegSeth, accusing the Democratic leader of worrying “much more of his own re-election” than “of the essential pay check for our altruistic troops”.
This date is considered a possible lever for the Republicans who are trying to withdraw the support of the Democrats from a measure to maintain funding from the government until November 21. Meanwhile, President Trump was committed on Sunday, during an event marking the 250th anniversary of the navy in Norfolk, Virginia, to “give our soldiers to the last penny” despite the government’s closure.
“Don’t worry,” Trump said. “Everything happens, it happens.”
But it remains to be seen exactly how the problem will be solved. On Tuesday, the president of the House of Representatives, Mike Johnson, said that he would be open to an emergency measure aimed at paying the members of the army, who would come separately from a broader bill aimed at opening the government. But the head of the senatorial majority, John Thune, quickly intervened at the press conference, adding: “You don’t need that”.
“There are obviously certain groups, many of which will be impacted in a very negative way by what is happening here,” said Thune. “But the easiest way to put an end to it is not to try to exempt this or that group or such group, but to open the government.”
13 months ago
A memo of the White House on the Unemployed Workers’ Salaries was rejected at the Capitol
A suggestion from the White House on Tuesday that the working unemployed workers would not be entitled to salary arrears at the end of the closure was reluctantly welcomed by the members of the two parties in the Capitol, some Republicans claiming that the note It floated the problem did not help.
A 2019 law adopted by the Congress and signed by President Trump was largely interpreted as guaranteeing salary arrears to unemployed workers following a lack of funding, but a note from the White House management and budget office indicates that this may not be the case. Legal analysis claimed that the law meant that the congress should approve of the workers’ wages of unemployed workers.
President Trump, invited to say if the unemployed workers would obtain a reimbursement of their salary, told the White House: “I would say that it depends on who we are talking about”.
The Capitol Republicans said on Tuesday that they thought that unemployed workers would be paid after a closure.
“I have not yet specifically examined the memo. My hypothesis is that unemployed workers will obtain a reimbursement of their salary,” said the head of the majority, John Thune.
The president of the room, Mike Johnson, said: “I hope that the unemployed workers will of course receive salary arrears. »»
Senator Tom Tillis de Caroline du Nord said he thought it was a “strategic error” to let the workers unemployed “think that they could potentially recover their salary”.
“I don’t think it’s a useful discussion at the moment,” he said.
35 min ago
Trump should hold a round table on the antifas in the White House
On the eighth day of the closure, the only event on the president’s program, apart from his usual information briefing, is the participation in a “round table on the antifa”, according to the White House.
Last month, the president appointed the vaguely affiliated left movement, abbreviation of “anti -fascist”, as a “major terrorist organization”. Internal security secretary Kristi Noem is in Portland, where the president said that ICE facilities were “besieged by antifa attacks and other national terrorists”.
State and local officials strongly challenged this qualification and accused the administration of stirring tensions on the ground. A federal judge has blocked The deployment of national guard troops in the city.
58 min
The Senate is preparing to vote for the sixth time of the government’s financing measures
The Senate must hold procedural votes on Wednesday at noon on government financing measures, trying to get out of the dead end for the sixth time after the bills did not obtain the 60 votes required on Monday.
The Chamber has voted on these measures several times, the Republicans seeking to withdraw the support of the Democrats to their measure. The Republicans put pressure on a measure voted by the Chamber to maintain the funding of the government until November 21, while the Democrats have a separate measure to finance the government until October which would also extend the health insurance tax credits, which has become the main requirement of democrats in the fight for funding.
The Republicans failed to get new support for their measure on Monday. And with 53 Republicans in the High House, the support of Democrats is necessary to advance a measure to finance the government.
A single democrat initially crossed the aisle to support the bill during a vote last month. But during the following vote, which took place last week, two other senators crossed the aisle to support him. Since then, the Republicans have been unable to withdraw additional support from Democrats during two other attempts.
58 min
Delayed flights in certain American airports due to a shortage of air controllers
Airports of American cities, including Denver; Newark, New Jersey; And Burbank, Californiaexperienced flight delays on Monday due to a shortage of air controllers, according to federal flight data.
Federal officials have reported more air traffic control installations due to low staff levels in recent days than since the summer of 2022, when the post-Cavid travel boom has rushed to delays and cancellations, according to an analysis of CBS News data on the Air Space of Federal Aviation Administration.
Flights to Burbank Hollywood AirportWhich serves Los Angeles, were slowed down until 1 a.m. on Tuesday, causing average delays of 2.5 hours, according to FAA data. No air controller was on service on Monday evening at the airport, the Governor of California Gavin Newsom wrote in an article on social networks.
According to CBS News Los AngelesAircraft commanders takeoff from Burbank airport were invited to contact Socal Approach, a company based in San Diego also known as Southern California Tracon, in order to communicate and obtain the departure authorization.
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Updated 58 months ago
The efforts to force the vote on the publication of Epstein files are blocked, House being absent due to the closure
While the Republican leaders of the House of Representatives held the Bass Chamber far from Washington to put pressure on the Senate so that he adopted a measure adopted by the Chamber to finance the government, efforts to force the vote on a measure which would oblige the Ministry of Justice to disclose documents related to Epstein have also been blocked in recent weeks.
The republican representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky and the Democratic representative Ro Khanna of California led the effort, known as the discharge petition, to force the vote, which is about to succeed once the return of the legislators. The republican leaders of the House of Representatives opposed the presentation of the bill, arguing that it was not enough to protect the victims. Although the leaders control what receives a vote, a discharge petition allows members of the lower chamber to bypass the managers if they manage to obtain a majority of 218 votes to sign.
The petition currently has 217 signatures, including all of the Democrats and four Republicans. And the new member of the Chamber, Adelita Grijalva, won a special election last month and is expected to postpone the final signature. But his oath was delayed due to the parliamentary holidays. Massie accused the president of the room, Mike Johnson, of “doing everything he can” to block the vote on the bill.
When he was asked on Tuesday if the delay in the oath of Grijalva had something to do with Epstein’s petition, Johnson told journalists that it had “nothing to do with that” and reiterated that she would oath once the room has been returned.