What's next for Trump's tax bill? Arguing House RepublicansNew Foto - What's next for Trump's tax bill? Arguing House Republicans

WASHINGTON –President Donald Trump's big tax bill haspassed the U.S. Senate, teeing up major changes to Medicaid and food stamps, extended income tax cuts, and new tax cuts for corporations, tips and overtime. But it's still a few steps away from Trump's desk – and the route to get there will not be simple. House Republicansare already slamming the changes made to the bill in the Senate, from moderate members concerned about cuts to Medicaid and fiscal conservatives who are concerned about the bill's massive price tag. It will add a projected $3.3 trillion to the national debt over the next 10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. "The United States is $37 TRILLION in the red. This is unsustainable," wrote Rep. Keith Self, R-Texas,on X. "I supportPresident Trumpand his tax cuts, but we cannot saddle our children and grandchildren with TRILLIONS upon TRILLIONS in new debt." However, House SpeakerMike Johnsonindicated in a statement that he plans to push his conference to accept the bill in order to meet the president's self-imposed deadline of July 4. "The House will work quickly to pass the One Big Beautiful Bill that enacts President Trump's full America First agenda by the Fourth of July. The American people gave us a clear mandate, and after four years of Democrat failure, we intend to deliver without delay," he said in a statement. "This bill is President Trump's agenda, and we are making it law." A key House committee plans to meet in the afternoon to begin the process of advancing the Senate's bill in the chamber. Trump indicated that he may be willing to budge on the July 4 deadline given the complications of passing it in the House. "I'd love to do July 4th, but I think it's very hard to do July 4th," Trump told reporters. "It can go longer, but we'd like to get it done by that time if possible." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What's next for Trump's tax bill? Quarreling House Republicans

What's next for Trump's tax bill? Arguing House Republicans

What's next for Trump's tax bill? Arguing House Republicans WASHINGTON –President Donald Trump's big tax bill haspassed the U.S....
US calls reported threats by pro-Iran hackers to release Trump-tied material a 'smear campaign'New Foto - US calls reported threats by pro-Iran hackers to release Trump-tied material a 'smear campaign'

WASHINGTON (AP) — Pro-Iran hackers have threatened to release emails supposedly stolen from people connected to PresidentDonald Trump, according to a news report, a move that federal authorities call a "calculated smear campaign." The United States haswarned of continued Iranian cyberattacksfollowing American strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities and the threats those could pose to services, economic systems and companies. The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency said late Monday that the threat to expose emails about Trump is "nothing more than digital propaganda" meant to damage Trump and other federal officials. "A hostile foreign adversary is threatening to illegally exploit purportedly stolen and unverified material in an effort to distract, discredit, and divide," CISA spokeswoman Marci McCarthy wrote in a social media post, linking to a report from Reuters about the threat. "These criminals will be found, and they will be brought to justice." Reuters reported that it contacted the alleged hackers online. They told the news organization that it held a large cache of emails from Trump chief of staffSusie Wiles, other top advisers and porn actor Stormy Daniels, to whom a hush money payment led to Trump'scriminal conviction. Federal prosecutorscharged three Iranians last yearon allegations of hacking into Trump's presidential campaign. Hackers also targeted the campaign of Democrats Joe Biden and Kamala Harris andunsuccessfully tried to leak materialsupposedly taken from Trump to Democrats and members of the media. The threat to release more hacked emails was reported the same day that CISA, the FBI and National Security Agency issued apublic bulletinwarning that hacking groups supportive of Tehranmay attack U.S. interestsdespite afragile ceasefire between Iran and Israel. The hackers, authorities warned, could seek to disrupt or disable critical infrastructure systems such as utilities, transportation and economic hubs. They also could target defense contractors or other American companies with ties to Israel, the agencies said. The bulletin outlined recommendations, including the use of regular software updates and strong password management systems to shore up digital defenses. Hackers backing Tehran havetargeted U.S. banks, defense contractors and energy companiesfollowingAmerican strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities— but so far have not caused widespread disruptions.

US calls reported threats by pro-Iran hackers to release Trump-tied material a 'smear campaign'

US calls reported threats by pro-Iran hackers to release Trump-tied material a 'smear campaign' WASHINGTON (AP) — Pro-Iran hackers h...
How do top NFL contracts compare to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's extension?New Foto - How do top NFL contracts compare to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's extension?

Oklahoma City ThunderguardShai Gilgeous-Alexanderjust became the richest player in NBA history by annual salary with thesuper max extensionhe signed Tuesday. But how does it compare to some of the top contracts in the NFL? By total value, Gilgeous-Alexander's $285 million contract would rank third of all active NFL players right now. OnlyKansas City ChiefsquarterbackPatrick MahomesandBuffalo BillsquarterbackJosh Allenhave signed bigger deals by total value. However, the fact that Gilgeous-Alexander's deal is for four years – not 10 like Mahomes' or six like Allen's – means the average annual value of his salary exceeds that of any NFL player. USA TODAY Sports has compiled the top-10 NFL contracts by total value and average annual value to show how they compare to that of the NBA's new leader in average annual value: Here are the top NFL contracts by total value and where Gilgeous-Alexander's new contract extension would rank if he were an NFL player: 1. Patrick Mahomes, QB, Kansas City Chiefs: $450 million 2. Josh Allen, QB, Buffalo Bills: $330 million 3. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, G, Oklahoma City Thunder: $285 million T-4. Joe Burrow, QB,Cincinnati Bengals: $270 million T-4. Trevor Lawrence, QB,Jacksonville Jaguars: $270 million 6. Brock Purdy, QB,San Francisco 49ers: $265 million 7. Justin Herbert, QB,Los Angeles Chargers: $262.5 million 8. Lamar Jackson, QB,Baltimore Ravens: $260 million 9. Jalen Hurts, QB,Philadelphia Eagles: $255 million 10. Dak Prescott, QB,Dallas Cowboys: $240 million SGA CONTRACT:Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder agree to record $285M contract extension Here are the top NFL contracts by average annual value and where Gilgeous-Alexander would rank if he were an NFL player: 1. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, G, Oklahoma City Thunder: $71.25 million/year 2. Dak Prescott, QB, Dallas Cowboys: $60 million/year T-3. Josh Allen, QB, Buffalo Bills: $55 million/year T-3. Joe Burrow, QB, Cincinnati Bengals: $55 million/year T-3. Jordan Love, QB,Green Bay Packers: $55 million/year T-3. Trevor Lawrence, QB, Jacksonville Jaguars: $55 million/year 7. Tua Tagovailoa, QB, Miami Dolphins: $53.1 million/year T-8. Jared Goff, QB, Detroit Lions: $53 million/year T-8. Brock Purdy, QB, San Francisco 49ers: $53 million/year 10. Justin Herbert, QB, Los Angeles Chargers: $52.5 million/year This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:How SGA's extension stacks up to highest paid NFL players

How do top NFL contracts compare to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's extension?

How do top NFL contracts compare to Shai Gilgeous-Alexander's extension? Oklahoma City ThunderguardShai Gilgeous-Alexanderjust became th...
Tight end Darren Waller coming out of retirement, traded to Miami DolphinsNew Foto - Tight end Darren Waller coming out of retirement, traded to Miami Dolphins

Tight end Darren Waller is coming out of retirement, and he's being traded to the Miami Dolphins,NFL Network's Tom Pelisseroreported Tuesday. The New York Giants, whom Waller last played for in 2023, are on the other end of the deal with the Dolphins. In addition to Waller, the Giants are giving up a conditional 2027 seventh-round pick, but, in return, New York is receiving a 2026 sixth-round pick from Miami,according to Pelissero. ESPN's Adam Schefterreportedthat Waller agreed to a one-year deal with the Dolphins that's worth up to $5 million. Waller will turn 33 in September. The one-time Pro Bowlerretired last Juneafter eight NFL seasons, but now he's back in the league after a one-year hiatus. The Dolphins are adding Waller a day aftertrading tight end Jonnu Smith to the Pittsburgh Steelers. Smith was part of a blockbuster deal that also sent seven-time Pro Bowl cornerback Jalen Ramsey to the Steelers. In exchange, Miami got back five-time Pro Bowl safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, who spent his first two NFL seasons with the Dolphins in 2018-19. Smith was highly productive during his lone season in Miami, earning his first Pro Bowl nod. The 2017 third-round pick — who previously played for the Tennessee Titans (2017-20), New England Patriots (2021-22) and Atlanta Falcons (2023) — caught 88 passes for 884 receiving yards, both the most by a tight end in Dolphins single-season history, plus notched a team-best eight receiving touchdowns. Only Brock Bowers of the Las Vegas Raiders, Trey McBride of the Arizona Cardinals and George Kittle of the San Francisco 49ers ranked ahead of Smith in tight end receiving yards last season. Notably, Smith skipped Miami's offseason practices while searching for a new contract. Waller will now headline a Dolphins tight end room that also includes an eighth-year journeyman in Pharaoh Brown and a third-year player in Julian Hill — who have a combined 90 receptions in their careers — as well as former undrafted free agents Tanner Conner, Hayden Rucci and Jalin Conyers. Waller decided to retire from football last June, ahead of Giants mandatory minicamp. At the time, the 2015 sixth-round pickaddressed his decision in a YouTube video. He mentioned hisdivorce from WNBA star Kelsey Plumand unpacked an off-the-field medical scare he experienced during the 2023 season that he said forced him to re-evaluate things. While Waller didn't share his diagnosis or what his medical condition was, he described how he ended up spending three-and-a-half days in a hospital midway through the 2023 season. It occurred while he was away from the team dealing with a hamstring injury he suffered in Week 8 against the New York Jets. "Last season in New Jersey, we played the Jets on October 29," Waller said in the video. "I got hurt that game. The following week, the Giants were playing the Raiders in Vegas. ... I started to feel like this fever coming on. ... The fever starts to build, I start to get the chills and stuff like that. By the time I pull into my parking garage at my condo and get out of the car, I'm, like, shaking pretty violently, like uncontrollably." Waller said he "couldn't breath" in his bed the next morning. That's when he called 911, the paramedics responded, and he started his hospital stay. "The worst possible thing for ... somebody like me would be to think that I am supposed to choose one lane of life, one path and stick with it like most of the world does," Waller said in the video. Close to 13 months later, Waller is returning to the NFL. He started 12 games for the Giants in 2023. That season, he reeled in 52 passes for 522 receiving yards and a touchdown. Although he began his career with the Baltimore Ravens in 2015, he's best known for his five-season run with the Raiders from 2018-22. Waller was suspended twice with the Ravens for violating the NFL's substance-abuse policy. His second suspension cost him the entire 2017 season. With the Raiders, though, Walleremerged as a starwho was vocal about the steps he had taken to overcome his struggle with substance abuse. He stitched together back-to-back 1,000-yard receiving seasons in 2019-20 and made the Pro Bowl in the second of those two breakout campaigns. In 2020, Waller logged 107 receptions, 1,196 receiving yards and nine receiving touchdowns. Waller has yet to tally more than 665 receiving yards in a season since.

Tight end Darren Waller coming out of retirement, traded to Miami Dolphins

Tight end Darren Waller coming out of retirement, traded to Miami Dolphins Tight end Darren Waller is coming out of retirement, and he's...
Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to TrumpNew Foto - Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump

Just months after PresidentDonald Trump's administration quietly moved to undercut a hardline immigration push by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, the two Republican former rivals are appearing side by side on Tuesday for the opening of a new migrant detention center in the Everglades. Trump and DeSantis are touring the compound — nicknamed"Alligator Alcatraz"— built on a remote airstrip surrounded by swamp and predators. In the latest display of his support for a signature Trump priority, DeSantis used emergency powers to seize the land and fast-track construction with encouragement from the Trump administration. While a White House official described the Trump-DeSantis relationship as "fine," DeSantis has faced a strained dynamic ever sincehe ran for the 2024 Republican nomination, crossing Trump, who believed he was responsible for the governor's rise. The White House for months has moved in ways that effectively isolated DeSantis in his own state, working behind the scenes with Florida lawmakers who refused the governor's demands on immigration. And Trump has elevated other Florida Republicans, inviting them to events in Washington that the governor did not attend. Also expected to attend Tuesday's event: Rep. Byron Donalds,Trump's favored pick to replacethe term-limited DeSantis as governor, a not-so-subtle reminder of shifting Republican loyalties in their shared home state. DeSantis, meanwhile, has publicly suggested that his wife, Florida first lady Casey DeSantis, would be a worthwhile successor. The couple have quietly urged the president to scale back his involvement in the race. Trump has since made several high-profile appearances with Donalds. As Trump was leaving the White House for Florida on Tuesday, he said his visit "should be very exciting, very good. Worked very hard on it with Ron and everybody, and I think it's going to be great." No state moved more aggressively to align itself with Trump's immigration crackdown than Florida. Under a new law signed by DeSantis, local police agencies must cooperate with federal immigration officials — a policy shift that has helped Florida account for nearly 40% of the 737 agreements Immigration and Customs Enforcement has signed with local law enforcement departments since Trump took office, according to agency data. Earlier this year, DeSantis' office and ICE announced the arrest of 1,120 undocumented immigrants over a week in what Florida called a "first-of-its-kind" statewide operation. During a visit with Fox News on Friday, DeSantis described the new Everglades facility as a "one-stop shop" for detaining, processing and deporting undocumented migrants. When completed, it will hold up to 5,000 beds. "This is going to be a force multiplier," DeSantis said, "and we're happy to work with the federal government to satisfy President Trump's mandate." Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, offered DeSantis some praise for his efforts ahead of the visit. "I mean, Gov. DeSantis, I'll give him credit. We got that facility that he's putting up in Florida. We'll be filling those beds as quick as we can, because we need more beds," Homan told reporters at the White House. But DeSantis had sought to go further. His office drafted legislation granting him unprecedented authority to deport migrants using state resources, a power traditionally reserved for the federal government. In a rare rejection of the governor's ambitions by Florida's Republican-led legislature, lawmakers declined to cede that power to DeSantis. Instead, they passed their own immigration package — one that notably excluded the deportation provision and was crafted in consultation with the White House, according to state House Speaker Daniel Perez. "We were talking to the White House the entire time," Perez told CNN on Monday. "The product that we finalized was the result of input from the House, the Senate, the governor and the White House. Our goal was to best assist the federal government in doing their job. They needed beds. And that's what this bill addressed." Perez declined to say whom he worked with in the Trump administration. The White House declined to comment. Perez was seen alongside Trump on multiple occasions this year. He attended the White House Easter Egg Roll and later celebrated the Florida Panthers' Stanley Cup victory with the president. DeSantis did not attend either event. As the 2024 Republican primary intensified, DeSantis increasingly criticized Trump's first-term immigration record, accusing him of failing to deliver on his central promise to build a border wall and force Mexico pay for it. "If Trump had built the border wall, it would have been very difficult for (President Joe) Biden to bring in all those many people," DeSantis said during a CNN town hall ahead of the Iowa caucuses. "That's why you want a wall. It's a physical fact of life, that even an open-border president would not be able to get around, so I will get the job done." After Trump defeated DeSantis, the two did not talk for months. Many in Trump's orbit harbor ill feelings toward DeSantis, including White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, who once worked for the governor before a bitter falling out. Lately, Trump and DeSantis have maintained a friendly public rapport. They have golfed together, and DeSantis has vocally defended Trump during public appearances, reprising the role that first endeared him to the president during his time in Congress. Trump has taken a personal interest in the detention facility that DeSantis has moved rapidly to build, the White House official said. The US Department of Homeland Security has approved the plan to temporarily repurpose the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport for use as a detention center. Another site at the Camp Blanding National Guard training center in northeast Florida is also under consideration, DeSantis spokeswoman Molly Best said in a statement to CNN. The airstrip sits in the middle of the Florida Everglades, an ecosystem dense with alligators, pythons, panthers and marshes that are notoriously difficult to navigate. Its surroundings have captured the immigration of many Republicans, including inside the Trump administration. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt suggested the location will serve as a natural deterrent for people trying to escape. DHS posted an image to social media over the weekend of alligators wearing Immigration and Customs Enforcement hats standing guard outside a prison. "Coming soon!" a caption said. DeSantis floated the idea of a Trump visit when talking with Fox News on Friday, gesturing toward a runway. "An invitation from me: We can land Air Force One right there no problem," he said. "I think the president would be impressed with what the guys are doing out here." This story has been updated with additional details. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Opening Florida’s ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump

Opening Florida's 'Alligator Alcatraz' gives DeSantis a chance to boost his ties to Trump Just months after PresidentDonald Trum...

 

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