Sunday, May 25, 2025

Here's what's in Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'New Foto - Here's what's in Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'

(The Center Square) – Republicans' mammoth budget reconciliation bill includes major changes to Medicaid, food stamps, student loans and more. It also permanently extends President Donald Trump's 2017 tax cuts – at a cost of at least $3.3 trillion. Passing the House Thursday by a razor-thin margin, theOne Big Beautiful Bill Actfunds large swaths of Trump's policy agenda while authorizing a $4 trillion debt ceiling hike. The legislation consists of 11 separate House committee prints that collectively fulfillthe budget resolution's 10-year spending and savings instructions. The bill includes more than $1.5 trillion in savings found by congressional committees. But budget watchdogs say the package, if passed by the Senate without major alterations, will still addanywhere from $3.3 to $5.2 trillionto the national debt andat least $3.2 trillionto the primary deficit by 2035. Most of the cost stems from the Ways and Means committee's portion, which deals with codifying most of the sunsetting 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act into law. That includes the higher standard deduction for nearly all tax filers, the $2,000 child tax credit – both parents will need a Social Security number to claim it – and the 20% Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction. American manufacturers would particularly benefit from the legislation, which would allow them to deduct 100% of facility improvement or construction costs. The bill would deal a blow to large universities by increasing endowment taxes, as well as hiking taxes on many private foundations. Republicans clashedover how high to raise the state and local tax, or SALT, deduction cap, eventually settling on $40,000 for taxpayers earning less than $500,000 annually, via a last-minute Rules Committee amendment. The tax portion of the reconciliation bill also features many short-term tax provisions set to expire after four years. Those include boosting the maximum standard deduction from $15,000 to $16,000 for single filers and from $30,000 to $32,000 for joint filers. The maximum child tax credit will see a $500 increase and the QBI deduction will rise to 23%. Other temporary changes lasting until fiscal year 2028 include nixing taxes on tips and overtime, making the adoption tax credit partially refundable, ending interest on loans for American cars, and increasing tax deductions for eligible seniors by $4,000. While lawmakers on the Ways and Means committee contributed most to the cost of the reconciliation package, the Energy and Commerce committee found the most savings – over $988 billion – primarily via scaling back the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act and Medicaid spending. Energy and Commerce's addition claws back unobligated funds from the IRA and repeals or phases out more than a dozen IRA renewable energy-related subsidies. Four tax credits related to alternative fuel vehicles, three credits related to home energy efficiency or "clean" energy sourcing, and the clean hydrogen production credit will end by 2026.After facing pressure from fiscal hawks, the Rules Committee pushed forward the 2032 phaseout deadline for the IRA's clean electricity production and investment credits to 2028. Medicaid reforms in the bill include changing program eligibility requirements back to pre-COVID-19 standards, imposing work requirements on most able-bodied adults without dependents, and closing loopholes exploited by states. The plan also axes federal funding to Planned Parenthood and other reproductive clinics, as well as prevents Medicaid and CHIP funding from going to gender transition procedures on children. According to the Congressional Budget Office, the changes will save hundreds of billions of dollars and make at least 7.7 million current Medicaid recipients – including 1.4 million people without verified citizenship status – ineligible for Medicaid coverage by 2034. But given the Biden-era 20% spending increase on Medicaid, total program spending will still grow by at least 3% a year for the next decade. Another last-minute addition by the Rules committee doubled down on Medicaid reforms, accelerating the work requirement deadline to take effect in 2026 and preventing states from implementing new taxes on providers. House Democrats, none of whom voted for the bill, repeatedly called the Medicaid changes "cruel." They similarly blasted the Agriculture Committee's section of the bill, which saves $230 billion by reforming the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. SNAP reforms include requiring states tocover 5% of their SNAP benefit cost shareby fiscal year 2028, with their contribution increasing the higher the state's payment error rate. States havean average payment error rate of 11.68%, as of 2023. The bill also closes state "waiver gimmicks" that haveexempted 84%of able-bodied adult beneficiaries without dependents from SNAP work requirements, plus bans all noncitizens aside from legal permanent residents from receiving benefits. Trump's border security and defense priorities received hundreds of billions of additional dollars collectively from the Homeland Security, Judiciary, and Armed Services committees' portions of the megabill. The Homeland Security committee authorized approximately $47 billion for the construction of the "Border Barrier System," a technologically enhanced southern border wall. Roughly $5 billion will go toward building new U.S. Customs and Border Patrol facilities and checkpoints and $6 billion toward border agent workforce and hiring. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement receives a $45 billion funding boost meant for building new detention centers from the Judiciary Committee's print. Notably, the bill also imposes new fees on immigrants, implementing a $1,000 minimum fee on migrants seeking asylum and a $500 fee on individuals requesting Temporary Protected Status, which is currently free. Sponsors of unaccompanied migrant children will face a $3,500 charge, while many work permit applications will carry a $550 fee that renews every six months. The Armed Services committee portion contributes $5 billion to border security efforts, but most of the $150 billion in spending is slated for shipbuilding, restocking munitions, increasing weapon production capacity and nuclear deterrence, and financingthe Golden Dome for America project. While the Transportation and Infrastructure committee gives $22 billion to the Coast Guard and $15 billion to the Federal Aviation Administration for infrastructure modernization, it imposes new fees on electric vehicle owners. Under the bill, EV owners will have to pay $250 annually as a contribution to the dwindling Highway Trust Fund. Owners of combustion engine vehicles contribute to the HTF every time they fill up their gas tank. The Natural Resources committee checks the box for Trump's energy agenda by expanding onshore oil and gas leasing on federal lands, reducing drilling royalty rates to 12.5%, and permanently reinstating coal leasing suspended by Biden. A final blow to the Biden administration in Trump's "big, beautiful bill" comes from the Education and Workforce committee's addition. It axes the 2023 SAVE loan repayment program, which amounted to potentially billions in complete loan forgiveness for thousands of student borrowers. The legislation also simplifies and shrinks student loan repayment options and penalizes higher education institutions that allow students to take out unaffordable levels of debt. Additionally, it restricts Pell Grant eligibility to students taking more than six credit hours and low-income students in short-term programs. Under normal Senate filibuster rules, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act would have no chance of passing. But since the budget reconciliation process bypasses the filibuster, Republican leaders are hopeful the package will make it to the president's desk. House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is aiming for that to happen by Independence Day. Senate Republicans are eyeing potentially derailing changes, however, with some senators opposing the IRA and Medicaid cuts – key compromises Johnson made with House hardliners – with others wanting even more spending reductions. "I think you can improve the product," Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., said in an interview about the bill with Punchbowl News. "There are certain things the Senate wants to have its imprint on." House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, cautioned against drastic bill reforms. "I'm urging my Senate colleagues to take up our balanced reconciliation package – and only consider changes that further strengthens our fiscal reforms – so we can quickly advance this One Big Beautiful Bill to the President's desk and deliver for the American people," he said.

Here's what's in Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill'

Here's what's in Trump's 'Big, Beautiful Bill' (The Center Square) – Republicans' mammoth budget reconciliation bill...
Book excerpt: "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler

We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article. Pulitzer Prize-winning author Anne Tyler's latest novel, the New York Times bestseller"Three Days in June"(Knopf), details a long weekend in the life of a divorced school administrator, bookended by the loss of her job and her daughter's wedding. Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Robert Costa's interview with Anne Tyler on"CBS Sunday Morning"May 25! "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler Prefer to listen?Audiblehas a 30-day free trial available right now. The clock gathered itself together with a whirring of gears and struck a series of blurry notes. Nine o'clock, I was thinking; but no, it turned out to be ten. I'd been sitting there in a sort of stupor, evidently. I stood up and hung my purse in the closet, but then outside the window I saw some movement on the other side of the curtain, some dark and ponderous shape laboring up my front walk. I tweaked the curtain aside a half inch. Max, for God's sake. Max with a duffel bag slung over one shoulder, and a bulky square suitcase dangling from his left hand. I went to the front door and opened it and looked out at him through the screen. "What on earth?" I asked him. "You're home!" he said. "Yes ..." "Debbie is at something called a Day of Beauty." "Right," I said. "But she knew ahead I was coming. I told her I was coming. I get there and no one's home. I call her cell phone and she says she didn't expect me so early." "Whydidyou come so early?" I asked him. "I wanted to beat the rush. You know what Fridays are like on the Bay Bridge." All the more reason not to live on the other side of it, I could have pointed out. I opened the screen door for him and reached for his suitcase, but it wasn't a suitcase; it was some kind of animal carrier. Square patch of wire grid on the end and something watchful and alert staring out from behind it gleaming-eyed. Max moved the carrier away from me a bit and said, "I've got it." "What is it?" "It's a cat." "A cat!" "Could I come in, do you think?" I retreated and he lumbered in, out of breath, shaking the floorboards. Max was nowhere near fat, but he was weighty, broad shouldered; he always gave the impression of taking up more than his share of room, although he was not much taller than I was. In the years since we'd divorced he had grown the kind of beard that you're not quite sure is deliberate; maybe he'd merely forgotten to shave for a while. A short gray frizzle with a frizzle of gray hair to match, and he seemed to have given up on his clothes; generally he wore stretched-out knit tops and baggy khakis. I hoped he'd brought a suit for the wedding. You never could be sure. "Couldn't you have just left your cat at home with food and water?" I asked, following him through the living room. "I mean, it's already bad enough that you're staying with Debbie yourself. In the middle of her wedding preparations, for God's sake!" "She said it would be fine if I stayed," Max told me. "She said it wasn't a problem." "Okay, but then to add a cat to the mix ... Cats do very well on their own. They almost prefer it, in fact." "Not this one," he said. He set the carrier on my kitchen counter. "This one is too new." "It's a kitten?" "No, no, it's old." "You just said—" "It's an elderly female cat who belonged to a very old woman, and now the woman has up and died and the cat is in mourning," he told me. There was a lot I could have asked about this, but it didn't seem worth the effort. I leaned closer to peer at the cat. "Does Debbie know you're bringing it?" I asked him. "Now she does." I waited. "It's complicated," he said. He blotted his face on his shoulder. "I phoned her; I said, 'Where are you?' She says she's at a Day of Beauty. 'Did you leave a key out someplace?' I asked her, and she says no, but she'll be home in a few hours. 'A few hours!' I say. 'I can't wait a few hours! I've got a cat here!' She says, 'A what?' Then she hits the roof. Tells me I can in no way bring a cat to her house, because Kenneth is allergic." "He is?" I said. "Deathlyallergic, is how she put it." "But ... Kenneth doesn't live there," I said. "Don't kid yourself," Max told me. "You know he stays over a lot, and besides, he does plan to live there after the wedding." "Well, sure,afterthe wedding." "'Deathly' allergic, Gail. As in, if he walks into a house where a cat has left a smidgen of dander behind, even if the cat is long gone he'll need a respirator." "A respirator!" "Or whatever you call those things that asthmatics have to carry around with them." "You mean an atomizer," I said. "No, not an atomizer; a what's- it. A vaporizer, maybe?" I thought it over. "At any rate, that's what Debbie claimed. She claimed that even if he's just standing next to her and she has cat dander on her sweater, he will start choking up and he'll need a ..." We both stood there, considering. The cat said, "Hmm?" We looked over at the carrier. "Anyhow," Max said, and he unfastened the two latches and lifted the lid. Instead of stepping out, the cat hunched lower and stared up at me. A gray-and-black tabby with a chunky face. "So I couldn't think where to go except here," Max said. "I knew where you hide your key. It didn't occur to me that you would be home on a weekday." "Yes, well ...," I said. And then I told the cat, "Hey there." She squared her eyes at me. "What's her name?" I asked Max. "I don't know." "What? How could you not know?" "I'm just the fosterer," he told me. "I volunteer at this shelter where they need people to foster animals until they can be adopted. Ordinarily it's kittens, batches of feral kittens that need domesticating first, but this one's a senior citizen. I'm thinking of naming her 'Pearl,' at least for as long as I have her around." "Pearl!" "On account of her color." "You can't name a cat 'Pearl.'" "Why not?" "Cats are so bad at language," I told him. "They're not the least bit like dogs. Cats just get your general tone, and 'Pearl' has a tone like a growl." "It does?" "So does 'Ruby.' So does 'Rhinestone.'" "Aha!" Max said. "See there? Everything turns out for the best." "It does?" I said. "What are you talking about?" "You can advise me on cat lore," he said. "Plus you might even decide to adopt her; who knows?" "Max," I said, "sometimes I wonder if you understand the least little thing about me." "But you love cats! You used to have that homely little calico cat. And this one's accustomed to older women." "Thanks," I said. "'Older,' I said. Not 'old.'" "I do not want a cat in any way, shape, or form," I told him. "What do you think of 'Mary?'" he asked. "Or 'Carol.' How about that?" "Forget it, Max," I said. Then I added, "And you want to steer away from thersound. Anris a growl, straight out." "Oh, right. Yes. Thank you." He paused. "How about 'Lucy'?" he said. "Forget it, I told you." He sighed. "Maybe you could drop her off at a shelter here in Baltimore," I said. "I mean, surely they wouldn't refuse her." "We're not allowed to just dump our charges any-old-where," he told me. "No, I'd better keep her here at your house, and then take her back to Cornboro if you really don't want her." "I most emphatically do not want her," I said. Then, "Nor do I want a houseguest." "Yes, but, see, there's dander all over my clothes now. I can't possibly go back to Debbie's, even without the cat." "In fact, I wonder if you should come to the wedding, even," I said. "Just think if Kenneth starts choking during the vows." This was pure mischief, on my part. I seriously doubted that Kenneth would choke; he'd always struck me as a sturdy type of guy. But Max looked stricken. He said, "Not attend my own daughter's wedding?" "Well, you could maybe wear a raincoat," I said. "Or one of those hazmat suits." The kitchen phone rang. We both glanced over at it. It rang again, and then a third time. "Aren't you going to get that?" Max asked me. But I was thinking it might be Marilee, and sure enough, after my outgoing message Marilee came on and asked, "Gail? Are you there?" This was why I still had an actual, physical answering machine: there were too many people I might not feel like talking to. "Because we really need to discuss this," Marilee said. "Could you pick up, please?" Max wrinkled his forehead at me. "Ignore that," I told him. "What's going on?" "Nothing's going on." "Okay ..." The answering machine clicked off, and I turned back to the cat. I briefly closed my eyes at her. Cats take that as reassurance; to them it's like a smile. Then I looked off in another direction. I heard a rustle, and when I slid a glance sideways I saw her unfolding herself from the carrier by degrees and stepping gingerly onto the counter. "A little weight problem," I murmured. As if to demonstrate, she landed on the floor with a noticeable thud. "I think it's from stress," Max said. "Apparently she'd been alone for some time before anyone realized her owner had died." I made a sympathetictsking sound. "What's up with Marilee?" Max asked. He'd never been very good at minding his own business. I said, "Nothing's up with Marilee." The cat was heading into the living room now, so I made a big show of following her. She paused to sniff at the fringe on the rug and then padded over to an armchair and sprang into it, more nimbly than you might expect. "What does she want to discuss?" Max asked, trailing after me. I gave up. I said, "She's retiring in the fall and she wants the board to hire this other person in her place, this Nashville person. And the Nashville person is asking to bring in her own assistant. So I'm thinking I should just quit before they fire me." "Excellent," Max said. I turned to look at him. "Your great talent is for teaching; you know that," Max said. "Dealing with all the kids who are scared to death of math." "You're forgetting that teachers make no money, though," I told him. "Why else did I put in all that hell time getting my master's degree?" "So? Now that Debbie's finished law school, you can go back to doing what you're good at." "It's not that simple," I told him. Still, it was nice of him to say that I was good at something. But then he changed the subject. "Guess I might as well bring in the cat supplies," he said. And he went on outside, leaving the front door open behind him even though the air conditioning was on. I turned back to the cat. She was a bread-loaf shape in the armchair now with her front paws folded beneath her, and when she saw me looking at her she shut her eyes lazily and then opened them again. Excerpted from "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler. Copyright © 2025 by Anne Tyler. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Get the book here: "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler Buy locally fromBookshop.org For more info: "Three Days in June"by Anne Tyler (Knopf), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formatsannetyler.com (Official site) 4 women arrested for allegedly aiding escaped New Orleans inmates A septuagenarian college graduate pays tribute Delta Air Lines' 100th year takes flight

Book excerpt: "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler

Book excerpt: "Three Days in June" by Anne Tyler We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article. P...
Tornadoes, storms, hail could wreak havoc on holiday events, travelNew Foto - Tornadoes, storms, hail could wreak havoc on holiday events, travel

A wall of moisture flowing north from the Gulf of America wasbringing weather havocand the threat of tornadoes to a broad stretch of the South on Sunday and was forecast to continue dumping heavy rains through Memorial Day. The ominous weather comes as a record-breaking number of Americanswere predicted to travelover the holiday weekend. A massive and somewhat stationary front extending from the Southeast to the Southern Plains and Central Rockies was expected to remain in place through Tuesday, the National Weather Service said. "Numerous" flash flooding events are possible and many streams could flood, affecting larger rivers, for parts of the Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys, the weather service said. "The hazards associated with these thunderstorms are frequent lightning, severe thunderstorm wind gusts, hail and a few tornadoes," forecaster Paul Ziegenfelder wrote May 25 in a public discussion on the Weather Prediction Center website. "There is an increased risk of severe thunderstorm wind gusts of 75 mph or greater and hail, two inches or greater, over the Southern Plains." Storms, rainfall:Unsettled weekend in parts of US Flood watches were posted Sunday over parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri and Kansas. Major cities that could be most affected by weather Sunday included Oklahoma City, Little Rock and Memphis. The weather service office in Memphis warned that parts of the area on Sunday could see 60-mph wind gusts and hail the size of quarters. Showers and thunderstorms were forecast for Monday into Tuesday. 45M Americans will be on roads:: How to avoid the worst Memorial Day traffic AAApredicted 45.1 million Americanswill travel domestically for the holiday weekend – an increase of 1.4 million from last year.Long holiday weekends are ideal for travelbecause so many people have an extra day off work and students have Monday off from school "Memorial Day weekend getaways don't have to be extravagant and costly," said Stacey Barber, vice president of AAA Travel. "While some travelers embark on dream vacations and fly hundreds of miles across the country, many families just pack up the car and drive to the beach or take a road trip to visit friends." AAA also predicts a surge of 2% in air passengers for the holiday weekend.Read more here. − Kathleen Wong This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Tornadoes, storms, hail could disrupt Memorial Day travel, events

Tornadoes, storms, hail could wreak havoc on holiday events, travel

Tornadoes, storms, hail could wreak havoc on holiday events, travel A wall of moisture flowing north from the Gulf of America wasbringing we...
What's open and closed on Memorial Day?New Foto - What's open and closed on Memorial Day?

In what had long been celebrated every May 30 to honor America's fallen soldiers, Memorial Day officially became a federal holiday in 1971, observed on the last Monday in May. Businesses increasingly havechosen to stay open, leading to what is now one of the biggest retail sales and travel weekends of the year. Here's what is open and closed this year on Memorial Day: GOVERNMENT BUILDINGS Government offices, post offices, courts and schools are closed. BANKS AND MARKETS U.S.stock marketsand banks are closed Monday. Most FedEx and UPS pickup and delivery services will also not be available on Memorial Day, though some special services will be accessible. RETAILERS Warehouse membership club Costco will beclosed on Memorial Day, but the vast majority of retailers will be open, with many trying to lure customers with big promotional sales. Hours may vary by location. TRAVEL Memorial Day is also considered the unofficial opening of the summer travel season. Americans are expected to get away in record numbers over the longMemorial Day weekendeven as economic and technical worries rattlethe U.S. travel industry. Auto clubAAA projects that more than 45 million people— 1.4 million more than last year — will venture at least 50 miles from their homes between Thursday and Monday, with the vast majority going by car. The holiday's previous domestic travel record of 44 million people was set 20 years ago. AAA's fuel tracker shows motorists can expect to pay less for gasoline this year. The U.S. average price on Wednesday was $3.18 for a gallon of regular gas compared to $3.60 a year ago. AAA projects 39.4 million people will travel by car over the weekend — the highest number for that holiday since AAA began tracking it in 2000 — and that another 3.61 million people will travel by air, a nearly 2% increase over last year's 3.55 million. Air safety has been on the minds of travelers after amidair collisionin January of a passenger jet and a U.S. Army helicopter above Washington, D.C. killed 67 people. There have also been some close calls. In recent weeks, flight delays and cancellations stemming from anair traffic controller shortageandequipment failuresat a facility that directs aircraft in and out of the Newark, New Jersey, airport have also made some people reluctant to get on a plane.

What's open and closed on Memorial Day?

What's open and closed on Memorial Day? In what had long been celebrated every May 30 to honor America's fallen soldiers, Memorial D...
Trump says Harvard's foreign students are from countries paying 'nothing' for their educationNew Foto - Trump says Harvard's foreign students are from countries paying 'nothing' for their education

PresidentDonald Trumpon Sunday criticized foreign countries for paying "nothing" toward the education of their citizens who are attending college at Harvard and other U.S. institutions. This comes amid the fight between the Trump administration and Harvard for its plans to revoke the university's ability to enroll foreign students. "Why isn't Harvard saying that almost 31% of their students are from FOREIGN LANDS, and yet those countries, some not at all friendly to the United States, pay NOTHING toward their student's education, nor do they ever intend to," Trump wrote early Sunday morning on Truth Social. "Nobody told us that!" Judge Temporarily Pauses Trump Move To Cancel Harvard Student Visa Policy After Lawsuit "We want to know who those foreign students are, a reasonable request since we give Harvard BILLIONS OF DOLLARS, but Harvard isn't exactly forthcoming," he continued. "We want those names and countries. Harvard has $52,000,000, use it, and stop asking for the Federal Government to continue GRANTING money to you!" On Friday, a judge temporarily blocked the administration from canceling Harvard's student visa program after the university filed a lawsuit against the federal government. Read On The Fox News App Harvard argued that the policy would affect more than 7,000 visa holders — nearly a quarter of thestudent body— and that the administration's effort is a "blatant violation of the First Amendment, the Due Process Clause, and the Administrative Procedure Act," according to its court filing. "It is the latest act by the government in clear retaliation for Harvard exercising its First Amendment rights to reject the government's demands to control Harvard's governance, curriculum, and the 'ideology' of its faculty and students," Harvard wrote in its complaint. Federal Judge Blocks Trump Administration From Terminating International Students' Legal Status The Department of Homeland Security moved to terminate Harvard's visa program after the university allegedly failed to provide extensive behavioral records of student visa holders the agency had requested. The records sought include any footage of protest activity involving student visa holders, even if it's not criminal, and the disciplinary records of all student visa holders in the past five years. Requested records also include footage or documentation of illegal, dangerous or violent activity by student visa holders, any records of threats or the deprivation of rights of other students or university personnel. Harvard called the new policy "pernicious" and accused the administration of departing from "decades of settled practice" and coming "without rational explanation." The university also said the policy was "carried out abruptly without any of the robust procedures the government has established to prevent just this type of upheaval to thousands of students' lives." At least a dozen Harvard students have had their student visas revoked over campus protest activity. Secretary of StateMarco Rubiosaid before Congress on Tuesday that the administration has probably revoked thousands already and would "proudly" revoke more. The administration has already frozen close to $3 billion in federal funding to the university, largely dedicated to research, over claims that Harvard has not adequately responded to alleged campus antisemitism in protests and has not moved to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion practices. Fox News' Morgan Phillips contributed to this report. Original article source:Trump says Harvard's foreign students are from countries paying 'nothing' for their education

Trump says Harvard's foreign students are from countries paying 'nothing' for their education

Trump says Harvard's foreign students are from countries paying 'nothing' for their education PresidentDonald Trumpon Sunday cri...

 

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