
House GOP pressing ahead for late-night vote on Trump’s DOGE cuts package
CNN
House Republican leaders are preparing for a late night in the chamber as they try to jam through President Donald Trump’s $9 billion package of cuts to federal funding — after a day of intense talks with GOP holdouts demanding a vote on a Jeffrey Epstein-related measure.
House Republican leaders are preparing for a late night in the chamber as they try to jam through President Donald Trump’s $9 billion package of cuts to federal funding — after a day of intense talks with GOP holdouts demanding a vote on a Jeffrey Epstein-related measure. Republican leadership sources say the plan is to push the bill, which would formally enshrine a slice of the funding cuts sought by Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency, through the chamber sometime Thursday night — with the potential to spill into the overnight hours. The DOGE cuts bill – known as a “recissions package” on Capitol Hill – would cancel $9 billion in funding to foreign aid and public broadcasting. Roughly $8 billion will be taken from congressionally approved foreign aid programs as part of the White House’s efforts to dismantle the US Agency for International Development. Another $1.1 billion comes from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which helps fund NPR and PBS. The issue of more transparency over the Epstein case has percolated for days on Capitol Hill and placed a wedge between Trump and even some of his most steadfast supporters in the House GOP. Republican leadership spent hours with House Rules Committee members Thursday afternoon, negotiating a path forward. The committee later voted Thursday night to advance the DOGE cuts package, a key hurdle the bill needed to clear before it can come to the floor for consideration. Separately, Republicans advanced a non-binding resolution that calls for the release of Epstein-related materials after a day of intense talks with GOP holdouts amid calls from a number of Republicans for more transparency.

The two men killed as they floated holding onto their capsized boat in a secondary strike against a suspected drug vessel in early September did not appear to have radio or other communications devices, the top military official overseeing the strike told lawmakers on Thursday, according to two sources with direct knowledge of his congressional briefings.












