Trump, Ukraine and Europe
Digest more
Trump, Senate and Republicans
Digest more
Trump, Powell and Fed
Digest more
The fiscal pain comes as up to 20 governors face reelection in 2026. President Donald Trump’s landmark legislation is driving a giant hole in governors’ budgets in a midterm year.
The Senate cleared two procedural hurdles Tuesday/TK day to move closer to a final vote on the GOP effort to codify Department of Government Efficiency spending cuts as a deadline to act on the White House priority looms.
North Carolina Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives say they voted for the new budget plan backed by President Donald Trump largely because of its large income tax cuts and ramped-up federal spending on immigration enforcement.
2don MSN
Jim McGovern, a Democratic congressman from Massachusetts, said that while he is frustrated by the recent passage of President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful bill," he isn't giving up his fight yet.McGovern sat down with WBZ-TV in a one-on-one interview.
11hon MSN
Senate Republicans are considering changes to President Trump’s $9.4 billion rescissions package, which targets funding for public broadcasting and foreign aid programs like PEPFAR. The proposal faces internal GOP concerns and united Democratic opposition,
The ink is hardly dry on President Donald Trump’s $3.4 trillion tax and spending package and House Republicans are already at work on a follow-up budget bill coming this autumn.
The historic legislation includes key campaign pledges like no tax on tips but also cuts Medicaid and food stamps by $1.2 trillion.
16h
Space.com on MSNTrump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' pushes for crewed moon missions, but proposed budget cuts leave NASA science behindThe U.S. government's "One, Big Beautiful Bill" Act finds funding for Artemis and Lunar Gateway, but nearly half of NASA's science missions are on the chopping block ahead of the 2026 budget.
While many estimates are circulating, only time will reveal how many people will actually lose health insurance under the law.
Steve Ghan, a retired PNNL scientist and a member of Friends of PNNL, told the Herald the impacts of jobs that would be lost under the administration’s proposed budget request would ripple through the economy as those workers’ incomes would be no longer be available to be spent on food, goods, entertainment and education.
Around 300 students in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, may face changes to after-school tutoring and English-language proficiency instruction unless the district's $860,000 federal grant is freed up by President Donald Trump's administration in time for the new school year.