
Key House Republicans threaten to oppose Trump agenda
CNN
With President Donald Trump’s agenda on the line, Speaker Mike Johnson is stuck in the middle between two disgruntled factions of the House GOP that want completely different things. If he can’t find a way to appease both, it could derail the whole bill.
With President Donald Trump’s agenda on the line, Speaker Mike Johnson is stuck in the middle between two disgruntled factions of the House GOP that want completely different things. If he can’t find a way to appease both, it could derail the whole bill. Nearly a dozen House hardliners are threatening to oppose their party’s tax and budget bill because, they argue, it doesn’t cut enough in spending. But separately, another half-dozen GOP centrists are also refusing to support it without billions more in state and local tax breaks. As Johnson and his leadership team barrel toward a floor vote in exactly one week, House Republicans are anxiously watching the collision course between the two opposing factions, which – as of Wednesday – is enough to doom the bill on the floor. Johnson plans to huddle separately Thursday morning with both factions in a last-ditch attempt to stave off a revolt. “We’re a long ways away from having a product that I think has anywhere close to 218 votes,” Rep. Chip Roy, a conservative hardliner, told CNN, adding that he counts “probably 20” specific problems with the bill – and that’s before any deal Johnson makes with GOP centrists on state and local taxes. But one of those centrists, Rep. Mike Lawler of New York, made clear that he is also opposed without changes. “As this stands right now, I am a no, and so they’re going to need to come up with a solution here and quickly, if they want to stay on the schedule that they’ve outlined,” Lawler told CNN.

American Battleground: Demolition Man – How Trump’s first year back is changing the nation’s capital
On a breezy autumn morning beneath skittering clouds, the demolition crew strikes quicker than almost anyone expected. Working seemingly under the sole command of President Donald J. Trump, who has long fashioned himself the Builder-in-Chief, they take only days to reduce the 123-year-old East Wing of the White House to rubble. No drawn-out debate. No approval by independent preservationists.

Dos semanas después del derrocamiento de Nicolás Maduro, los ciudadanos venezolanos que viven en diferentes países de la región siguen con atención lo que ocurre en la tierra que los vio nacer. Jimena de la Quintana visitó Gamarra, el emporio comercial más grande de Perú y uno de los más importantes de Latinoamérica, que es fuente de empleo de muchos venezolanos. ¿En qué condiciones regresarían esos migrantes venezolanos a su país? ¿Para ellos es suficiente que Maduro ya no esté en el poder?

The Pentagon has ordered the military command that oversees new recruits’ enlistment to hold off on initial training for people who are HIV-positive and recently enlisted in the military, CNN has learned, saying that a decision on reinstating a Defense Department ban on their joining the military was “expected in the next few weeks.”

The European Union and the Mercosur bloc of South American countries formally signed a long-sought landmark free trade agreement on Saturday, capping more than a quarter-century of torturous negotiations to strengthen commercial ties in the face of rising protectionism and trade tensions around the world.

Judge restricts federal response to Minnesota protests amid outrage over immigration agents’ tactics
Immigration agents carrying out a sweeping operation in Minnesota can’t deploy certain crowd-control measures against peaceful protesters or arrest them, a federal judge ruled Friday. The order follows widespread outrage over a fatal shooting, reports of US citizens getting detained and Minnesotans getting asked for documents for no clear reason.








