US Supreme Court liberals increasingly marginalized as conservatives flex musclesNew Foto - US Supreme Court liberals increasingly marginalized as conservatives flex muscles

By Jan Wolfe WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court's three liberal justices exerted waning influence during its recently concluded term, and their frustrations with the conservative majority spilled into public view in major cases involving President Donald Trump and issues such as transgender rights. In five of the biggest cases of the term, which wrapped up with its final rulings on June 27, the court's six conservative justices were in the majority and liberal Justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson were in dissent. Top among these was the ruling on the term's final day that curbed the ability of judges to impede Trump's policies through nationwide injunctions. The other four came in cases at the heart of the American "culture wars." Those included rulings that upheld a Tennessee law banning gender-affirming care for transgender minors, backed a Texas law requiring pornographic websites to verify the age of users in an effort to protect minors, let parents opt children out of public school classes with LGBT themes and allowed South Carolina to strip abortion provider Planned Parenthood of Medicaid funding. The ideological divide was abundantly clear in cases in which the justices acted on an emergency basis, sometimes called the "shadow docket," which produced a string of orders permitting Trump to enact policies impeded by lower courts. Trump's appointment of three justices - Amy Coney Barrett in 2020, Brett Kavanaugh in 2018 and Neil Gorsuch in 2017 - during his first term in office gave the court its 6-3 conservative majority, and the nation's top judicial body has since moved American law decisively rightward, as it did again this term. "The three liberals are out of cards at the table," said George Mason University law professor Robert Luther III, using a card-game analogy. "They just don't have the numbers to make an impact." Their lack of sway was particularly evident in "core culture war cases," added Luther, who has advised Trump on judicial nominations. "These are the kinds of cases that brutal confirmation fights like Kavanaugh's are all about," Luther said, referring to the Republican-led Senate's narrow confirmation of Trump's nominee following allegations of sexual misconduct dating back decades that Kavanaugh denied. "These are the kind of cases that prove the right is winning the war for the courts." THE ROBERTS COURT The court has been under the guidance of conservative Chief Justice John Roberts since 2005. But it was after Trump appointed Barrett to replace the late liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg five years ago that the liberal bloc's influence sank to a low point. "I think it's a mistake to think the liberals ever had serious sway on the Roberts Court since they've been winnowed down to three members," said Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis. "The only question is this: can the liberals convince their colleagues, on occasion, that they're wildly out of step with the public and need to pull back on some decisions? And do two of their conservative colleagues even care?" Kreis asked. If the liberal justices remain united, they need two conservatives to join them in a case in order to prevail. In the emergency docket cases, which reach the justices on a condensed timeline that leaves little time for consensus-building, the six justices appointed by Republican presidents gave a green light to several Trump policies. Endorsing his expansive view of presidential authority, they let him move forward with mass deportations, fire the heads of independent federal agencies and ban transgender people from the military. In the June 27 ruling authored by Barrett in the birthright citizenship case, the Supreme Court did not address the legality of a Trump directive blocked by three federal judges. Trump had directed federal agencies to refuse to recognize the citizenship of children born in the United States who do not have at least one parent who is an American citizen or lawful permanent resident, also called a "green card" holder. Instead, the court curbed the ability of federal judges to issue "universal" injunctions to block the Republican president's policies nationwide. Sotomayor, the most senior of the liberal justices, read her entire dissent from the bench, signaling her strong disagreement with the conservative majority's ruling. Over the course of 20 minutes, Sotomayor denounced the decision, saying "no right is safe in the new legal regime the court creates." "Today, the threat is to birthright citizenship," Sotomayor wrote in her dissent. "Tomorrow, a different administration may try to seize firearms from law-abiding citizens or prevent people of certain faiths from gathering to worship." 'POLITICAL WHIMS' Sotomayor similarly read a scathing dissent from the bench on June 18 after the court allowed Tennessee to restrict gender-transition medical care for people under age 18. Sotomayor said with the ruling the court "abandons transgender children and their families to political whims." Jackson wrote in a dissent that the ruling authored by Barrett on nationwide injunctions posed an "existential threat to the rule of law." Barrett's ruling, Jackson asserted, is "profoundly dangerous since it gives the executive the go-ahead to sometimes wield the kind of unchecked, arbitrary power the (nation's) founders crafted our Constitution to eradicate." Barrett countered that "Justice Jackson decries an imperial executive while embracing an imperial judiciary" and "would do well to heed her own admonition: 'Everyone, from the president on down, is bound by law.'" Sotomayor, who told a Harvard University audience last year that she sometimes cries in her office after rulings, is writing her dissents to an audience of future generations of lawyers, according to George Washington University law professor Paul Schiff Berman. "Dissenting opinions do have an impact on the law over time," Berman said. Sotomayor's approach resembles one employed by the late conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, according to Trinity College historian Kevin McMahon. Scalia often found himself in the minority in important rulings and sometimes was criticized by other conservatives for not making more of an effort to build consensus with his liberal colleagues, McMahon said. But years later, Scalia's dissents are serving as the foundation for rulings now that the court has moved decidedly to the right, McMahon said. Scalia's death in 2016 left the court with four liberal justices and four conservative justices. Trump's three appointments in the next four years created a conservative super majority. "Scalia often wasn't willing to compromise. He was more interested in writing that powerful, powerful dissent," McMahon said. "And, in the long run, those dissents have become law." Kagan is regarded as the liberal justice most willing to moderate her positions to build consensus with the conservatives. McMahon said Kagan's approach resembles that of the late liberal Justice William Brennan, who would tell his clerks: "Five votes can do anything around here." Kagan's willingness to compromise has allowed her to author rulings in some major cases in recent years such as a 2024 decision that clarified how the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment protections against government abridgment of freedom of speech apply to social media companies. "When you're a Supreme Court justice, you know you're going to be there for a long time, and you know things are going to change," McMahon said. "Sometimes, you take a little win. And then, maybe a couple years later you can expand your thinking." (Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Will Dunham)

US Supreme Court liberals increasingly marginalized as conservatives flex muscles

US Supreme Court liberals increasingly marginalized as conservatives flex muscles By Jan Wolfe WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court...
WHO says Gaza's Nasser hospital 'one massive trauma ward'New Foto - WHO says Gaza's Nasser hospital 'one massive trauma ward'

By Olivia Le Poidevin GENEVA (Reuters) -Nasser hospital in Gaza is operating as "one massive trauma ward" due to an influx of patients wounded at non-United Nations food distribution sites run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the World Health Organization said on Friday. The U.S.-and Israeli-backed GHF began distributing food packages in Gaza at the end of May, overseeing a new model of deliveries that the United Nations says is neither impartial nor neutral. It has repeatedly denied that incidents involving people killed or wounded at its sites have occurred. Referring to medical staff at the Nasser hospital, Rik Peeperkorn, WHO representative in the West Bank and Gaza, told reporters in Geneva: "They've seen already for weeks, daily injuries ... (the) majority coming from the so-called safe non-UN food distribution sites. The hospital is now operating as one massive trauma ward." Israel lifted an 11-week aid blockade on Gaza on May 19. The United Nations human rights office said on Friday that it had recorded at least 613 killings both at aid points run by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation and near humanitarian convoys. "We have recorded 613 killings, both at GHF points and near humanitarian convoys - this is a figure as of June 27. Since then ... there have been further incidents," Ravina Shamdasani, the spokesperson for the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, told reporters in Geneva. The OHCHR said 509 of the 613 were killed near GHF distribution points. The GHF has previously said it has delivered more than 52 million meals to hungry Palestinians in five weeks "safely and without interference", while other humanitarian groups had "nearly all of their aid looted." The U.N. office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said that there have been some instances of violent looting and attacks on aid truck drivers, which it described as unacceptable. BULLET WOUNDS Hundreds of patients, mainly young boys, were being treated for traumatic injuries, including bullet wounds to the head, chest and knees, according to the WHO. Peeperkorn said health workers at Nasser hospital and testimonies from family members and friends of those wounded confirmed that the victims had been trying to access aid at sites run by the GHF. Peeperkorn recounted the cases of a 13-year-old boy shot in the head, as well as a 21-year-old with a bullet lodged in his neck which rendered him paraplegic. "There is no chance for any reversal or any proper treatment. Young lives are being destroyed forever," Peeperkorn said, urging for the fighting to stop and for more food aid to be allowed into Gaza. The war began when Hamas fighters stormed into Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's subsequent military assault has killed more than 57,000 Palestinians, according to the Gaza health ministry, while displacing most of the population of more than 2 million, triggering widespread hunger and leaving much of the territory in ruins. U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday it would probably be known in 24 hours whether Hamas has agreed to accept what he has called a "final proposal" for a ceasefire in Gaza. (Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, Editing by Miranda Murray and Alex Richardson)

WHO says Gaza's Nasser hospital 'one massive trauma ward'

WHO says Gaza's Nasser hospital 'one massive trauma ward' By Olivia Le Poidevin GENEVA (Reuters) -Nasser hospital in Gaza is op...
Who is Sonay Kartal? What to know of player who beat Jelena Ostapenko at WimbledonNew Foto - Who is Sonay Kartal? What to know of player who beat Jelena Ostapenko at Wimbledon

As the famous saying goes, the fourth time's the charm. Well, that's not exactly it. But it is a saying that works when looking at howSonay Kartal'sfourth go-around in her "home Grand Slam"of Wimbledon. After not finding a win in her previous three triesat The Championships at Wimbledon, Kartal has continued her breakout season with a breakthrough: a top-20 ranked victory overJelena Ostapenkoin the first round. She followed that up with a win against Viktoriya Tomova to advance past the second round. After all, fourth time's the charm, right? Kartal continues her chase for her first Grand Slam title on July 4 against Diane Perry with the third round of competition in the women's singles tournament on Court No. 1at the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Clubon Church Road in London. Here's what to know about Kartal as the Wimbledon Championships continue: REQUIRED READING:Where are line judges at Wimbledon? Why Grand Slam event moved to electronic system Sonay Kartal is a 23-year-old women's tennis player who is from the United Kingdom. She opened up her fourth go-around at Wimbledon with quite the statement, as she came back to defeat Ostapenko for her third-ranked win of the season. Kartal's previous two ranked wins came against Moyuka Uchijima (then-No. 3 in the world) at the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open and Beatriz Haddad Maia (then-No. 16) at the BNP Paribas Open. Noted by her WTA Tour player profile page,Kartal holds a record of 157-58 all-time and has earned $998,922 in prize money shares. Wimbledon is a combined 3-0 in the 138th edition of the Wimbledon Championships, with two wins in the women's singles tournament and a win in the women's doubles tournament alongside her teammate Jodie Burrage. Here's how Kartal has fared in the 2025 Wimbledon Championships in singles matches: First Round:Defeated Jelena Ostapenko (7-5, 2-6, 6-2) Second Round:Defeated Viktoriya Tomova (6-2, 6-2) Third Round:vs. Diane Perry at July 4 at 8 a.m. ET on No. 1 Court Here's how Kartal has fared in the 2025 Wimbledon Championships in doubles matches: First Round:Defeated Jessica Bouzas Maneiro and Yvonne Cavalle-Reimers (4-6, 6-1, 7-5) REQUIRED READING:Where is Wimbledon played? Location for 138th Wimbledon Championships Noted by theofficial PIF WTA Rankings page,Kartal is ranked as the No. 51 women's singles player in the world. She is additionally ranked asthe No. 389 women's doubles player. Kartal is 23 years old. She will turn 24 on Oct. 28, 2021. Kartal is a native of the United Kingdom. She lives in Sidcup, England, which is located on the southeast side of London. REQUIRED READING:What surface is Wimbledon played on? What to know Of the four Grand Slam events on the tennis calendar, Kartal has played Wimbledon the most. The 2025 Wimbledon Championship is the fourth time Kartal has played in the Grand Slam event at the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club. In Grand Slam singles matches this season, Kartal fell in the first round of the Australian Open and made it to the second round at Roland Garros. Here's a full breakdown of Kartal's history in tennis' four Grand Slam events,per her Wimbledon player profile pages: Note: Farthest round advancement in parentheses Grand Slam singles 2022:Wimbledon (First Round) 2023:Wimbledon (First Round) 2024:Wimbledon (Third Round) 2025:Australian Open (First Round) and Roland Garros (Second Round) Grand Slam doubles 2022:Wimbledon (First Round) 2025:Roland Garros (Second Round) The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast.Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Who is Sonay Kartal? What to know of player who beat Jelena Ostapenko

Who is Sonay Kartal? What to know of player who beat Jelena Ostapenko at Wimbledon

Who is Sonay Kartal? What to know of player who beat Jelena Ostapenko at Wimbledon As the famous saying goes, the fourth time's the char...
NBA stock up, stock down after free agency and draft: Rockets, Nuggets make big movesNew Foto - NBA stock up, stock down after free agency and draft: Rockets, Nuggets make big moves

NBAfree agency has hit something of a lull. While some talented players remain available, the biggest moves have taken place, leaving a clear indication of which teams have become far better than they were two weeks ago. Similarly, whether because of luxury tax or apron considerations, or because of differences in roster building, it's clear teams that lost key players aren't quite as strong as they had been. In any case, all teams are chasingthe 2025 NBA Finals championOklahoma City Thunder, who are returning their young core. Here's a look at four NBA teams whose stock is up after theNBA draftand free agency and four teams whose stock is down. They are clearly making a move to win an NBA title.The trade for Kevin Durantwill generate the most discussion, but Houston also made a few corresponding moves that set it up for contention. Re-signing Steven Adams was huge, as the Rockets thrived with their double-big lineup alongside Alpren Sengun. To bolster that even further, the Rockets signed Clint Capela, where he played the first six seasons of his career. But perhaps the sneakiest expert move was nabbing 3-and-D forward Dorian Finney-Smith, who now gives Houston coveted depth and length at the wing. In a league that is often called a copycat league, trying to replicate what another successful team did, you need the right personnel. The Nuggets are trying to do what Oklahoma City did — building a team with players who provide depth and offensive and defensive versatility and anchored by an MVP-caliber player (Nikola Jokic in the Nuggets' case). Denver traded for Cam Johnson and Jonas Valanciunas, and signed Bruce Brown and Tim Hardaway Jr. Valanciunas provides much-needed help with the non-Jokic minutes, Cam Johnson is two-way upgrade over Michael Porter Jr. whom the Nuggets traded to get Johnson, Brown is back in his comfort zone where he helped the Nuggets win the 2023 title, and Hardaway was a starter and 36.8% 3-point shooter for a 44-win Pistons team last season. Denver was 50-32 last season, and new coach David Adelman will have a deep roster to try and win a title with Jokic and Jamal Murray leading the way. TheHawkshave had a tremendous offseason. Fromgetting Kristaps Porzingisat a discount, to solid depth pieces in free agency like Nickeil Alexander-Walker and Luke Kennard, Atlanta has put itself in position to compete in a wide-open East. The Hawks did lose Clint Capela, though Onyeka Okongwu had taken his starting spot and also lost Caris LeVert, but the Alexander-Walker move offsets that. The move that was a stroke of genius, though, might not be felt for another year. The Hawks traded down 10 spots in the draft and landed an unprotected first-rounder from theNew Orleans Pelicansthat could become a lottery selection. And, Atlanta still came away with a talented forward in Asa Newell at No. 23. The Pistons added depth with Caris LeVert and Duncan Robinson, and they are in the mix for Malik Monk, who was second in Sixth Man of the Year voting in 2023-24. Paul Reed returns to Detroit, providing front-court depth. Regardless of the Monk situation — the Pistons might acquire him as part of a sign-and-trade that sends Dennis Schröder to Sacramento, Detroit supplemented its roster with shooting, playmaking and depth, and it has availability to add more players in free agency. As Cade Cunningham progresses as an All-NBA guard, the Pistons are in position to take another jump in the East. It's a strange time in Lakers Land. They lost Dorian Finney-Smith in free agency, LeBron James' future with the franchise is unclear and while DeAndre Ayton has the physical tools to help, will he be available enough and have the necessary motivation and dedication with Los Angeles? The Lakers have been running on two tracks — win now with James and Luka Doncic, and prepare for a future without James. It's getting more difficult for the Lakers to have it both ways. With Oklahoma City loaded and Houston and Denver making moves, where do the Lakers fit in the West? Are they any closer to championship contention than they were when the lost in the first round in April? Losing center Myles Turner, who had been the longest-tenured Pacer, is one thing; losing him to a fiercely hated rival is another. But because the Pacers seem unwilling to dip into the luxury tax, they have been limited with the moves they can do. Indiana was also without a first-round pick, though trading early in the second round for guard Kam Jones was a decent move. Still, with no reliable option at center, and with star point guard Tyrese Haliburton expected to miss all of next seasonwith a torn Achilles, it has been a rough go since the middle of the first quarter ofGame 7 of the NBA Finals. The Kings are in transition with a new front office led by vice president of basketball operations Scott Perry and new head coach Doug Christie. The Kings will acquire Dennis Schröder, and they're still in the mix for other deals/potential roster improvements (Golden State Warriorsrestricted free agent Jonathan Kuminga is a player to watch), but will it be enough to make a difference for a team that was 40-42 in a deep Western Conference last season? Is he the answer at point guard after losing De'Aaron Fox at the trade deadline? The Kings could also lose Malik Monk's scoring punch. Trading Jonas Valanciunas for Dario Saric is also a downgrade. The good: Minnesota re-upped with a pair of its key contributors in Julius Randle and sixth man Naz Reid. The bad: they reportedly lost defensive wing Nickeil Alexander-Walker in a sign-and-trade, getting a 2027 second-round pick and cash considerations in return. Alexander-Walker was a significant part of the team's identity, but the biggest issue facing the Timberwolves is that — after making consecutive trips to the Western Conference finals but falling short — the status quo doesn't appear to be the answer. And No. 17 overall draft pick Joan Beringer, 19, is a project. The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments bysubscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NBA free agency: Stock up and stock down after biggest moves

NBA stock up, stock down after free agency and draft: Rockets, Nuggets make big moves

NBA stock up, stock down after free agency and draft: Rockets, Nuggets make big moves NBAfree agency has hit something of a lull. While some...
The battle to sway voters over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' beginsNew Foto - The battle to sway voters over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' begins

For months, more than a dozen Hill Republicans have been sounding the alarm about the steep Medicaid cuts in President Donald Trump's sprawling agenda package, which is now just hours away from becoming law. North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis called cuts to Medicaid "inescapable." Missouri Sen. Josh Hawley called Republicans' targeting of Medicaid "a mistake." Nebraska Rep. Don Bacon, who once declared he wouldn't support anything with over $500 billion in cuts, said he reluctantly supported the Senate's nearly $1 trillion in cuts because of other tax breaks in the bill. Now, Democrats are turning those precise GOP warnings into the centerpiece of their strategy to seize control of Congress in the midterms next November. "It's 2018 all over again," said Rep. Jared Golden of Maine, a Democrat who holds one of his party's toughest, most Trump-friendly swing seats. "I'm not gonna predict the future but I think today was a pretty bad vote for them," Golden told CNN, adding that he did not consider voting for the GOP bill, despite billions for border security and military funding. "I would never vote for these Medicaid cuts. Never." Recent polling so far shows Republicans have a tough sales job ahead of them, with53 percent of votersopposing the bill in a Quinnipiac University poll from June. But the GOP plans to hit back, armed with their own argument that Democrats stood in the way of broadly popular tax breaks for many Americans, billions more for border security and additional support for American troops. They argue that Democrats are vastly exaggerating the cuts to Medicaid, most of which come from work requirements largely targeted at able-bodied adults without dependents who don't work or attend school 80 hours a month. Speaker Mike Johnson described the bill as the "most comprehensive, complicated piece of legislation" in recent memory, and "arguably in the top two or three in the history of the Congress." Trump praised the legislation at an event in Iowa on Thursday and suggested using Democrats' opposition to it on the campaign trail. New York Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis offered an emphatic defense of the legislation while calling Democratic critics "liars" and accusing them of "fearmongering." And she argued for the new Medicaid work requirements by saying, "Nobody loses benefits if they choose." But Democrats insist they have a far more potent message. "We will look back on election night last November, on what just happened this week, culminating with this vote today, as the beginning of the House majority for Democrats," Rep. Brendan Boyle of Pennsylvania told CNN. "There's nothing more effective than a member of Congress saying things in their own words about how bad this bill is," added California Rep. Ami Bera, who is heavily involved in the Democrats' campaign operation. He pointed to Republicans like Rep. David Valadao, whose rural California district is heavily reliant on state and government aid. Roughly two-thirds of people in his district get their health insurance from Medicaid. "This is really a bad vote for David," Bera said. The bill cuts nearly $1 trillion over a decade from Medicaid, which has seen its costs balloon since an Obama-era expansion of that program across 40 states. Roughly 12 million people could lose health insurance by 2034 because of the changes to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act under the bill, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Some of the starkest impacts won't be felt for years, and the bill's work requirements won't take effect until the end of 2026. Ahead of its final passage, the "big, beautiful bill" was already the subject of anintenselobbying campaign, with more than $35 million spent on advertisements in June in an attempt to sway members and their constituents. Those ad wars are continuing, as outside groups and dark money networks on both sides prepare large advertising campaigns for the coming weeks and months in a race to define the sprawling legislation. "After this vote, every time you wait longer at a doctor's office or get a higher utility bill in the mail, it's gonna have a 'brought to you by MAGA' disclaimer to go along with it," said Jesse Ferguson, a Democratic strategist who has worked on House races. A collection of Democratic outside groups – including Save My Care, Protect Our Jobs, Unrig Our Economy and others – areset to spendseveral million dollarsbetween the beginning of July and the end of the year, according to data from the ad tracking firm AdImpact, targeting about a dozen key seats. Many were on the air throughout June and have continued launching new attack spots amid the legislative wrangling this week. Demonstrating the reactive posture, Unrig Our Economy launched a new spot following Thursday's vote, targeting GOP Rep. Juan Ciscomani, from Arizona's competitive 6th Congressional District, linking criticism of his vote to the July 4 holiday deadline. "While Americans are celebrating our country with family, friends, and fireworks, Republicans in Congress just passed the largest cut to Medicaid in history,"the ad says, singling out Ciscomani. House Majority Forward, a nonprofit affiliated with House Democratic leadership, is creating ads to hit multiple vulnerable Republicans later this month, including Reps. Scott Perry in central Pennsylvania, Tom Barrett in southern Michigan and Derrick Van Orden in western Wisconsin, according to a person familiar with the plans. "You can be sure that HMP will use their own words against them in our ads next year, and we will take back the House in 2026," the group's spokesman, CJ Warnke, said in a statement to CNN. Van Orden, for his part, shrugged off any analysis predicting that millions of people would lose coverage because he doesn't trust the Congressional Budget Office. "The state of Wisconsin is going to get an additional billion dollars a year for our healthcare system. That's why I'm not worried about any of the junk you're talking about with reelection," Van Orden said, adding that he's also getting $500 million for rural healthcare infrastructure. Democrats still have work to do to win the messaging battle against Trump's legislative agenda. Polling conducted on behalf of House Democrats last month showed that few battleground voters knew much about the GOP's massive tax and spending cuts package, which initially passed the House in May, according to PowerPoint slides of the data presented to members, obtained by CNN. In a private meeting to discuss the 2026 midterms, House Democrats brought in an outside pollster who presented internal Democratic polling that showed few voters said they had heard "a lot" about the bill, while larger shares said they had heard "a little" or "not at all." Some Democrats saw the data as a warning sign that their party is struggling to land political hits against the bill. "Don't allow Republicans to define this bill," said one slide in the presentation, which was obtained by CNN. Key Democratic outside groups are already at work fine-tuning the messaging with off-year races in Virginia and New Jersey and the 2026 midterms in mind, aiming to raise voter awareness of the cuts to safety net programs. A research report commissioned by one of those groups, Protect Our Care, and obtained by CNN, showed survey results for ads across 11 battleground districts, aiming for movement among 2024 Trump voters and swing voters and developing content "effective at lowering the job approval of Republican incumbents." "Pairing the Republican effort to cut Medicaid with the simultaneous reduction in taxes on the rich and corporations is an effective way to reduce Republican job approval," the report said. Republicans are readying their own attacks on Democrats for voting against the more popular provisions in Trump's first big legislative priority, emphasizing tax cuts and border security. In a political memo obtained by CNN the day of the House vote, the National Republican Congressional Committee previewed the case it will make, saying that "House Republicans will be relentless in making this vote the defining issue of 2026." "Every Democrat voted to hurt working families and to protect the status quo. This vote is now their political identity, and the NRCC will work every day from now until next November to brand House Democrats with it," the memo says. And Republicans argue that Americans generally support the idea of work requirements for federal safety net programs like Medicaid and SNAP. GOP Rep. Tim Burchett, who represents the Knoxville-area in Tennessee, insisted that the bill would not complicate reelection chances for his colleagues in swing districts. "America understands that things like, if you're able to work, you ought to work. We need to clear up some of the fraudulent behavior so that it provides for those single moms with two kids that are maybe just getting by and it doesn't collapse the system," Burchett said. But North Carolina Rep. Chuck Edwards, a Republican who had raised concerns about the bill and the potential impact of Medicaid cuts, expressed some lingering reservations about the legislation. "No bill is perfect," Edwards said. "I wish I had more time to digest the Senate's version and have one-on-one dialogues back at home, but I believe that we've made some steps in the right direction." Asked about his message to constituents who could lose access to Medicaid under the new policies, Edwards said, "I don't see a situation at this time where anyone that is entitled to Medicaid would be losing it, but I'd be open to hear folks' thoughts and ideas as they might see differently." Meanwhile, Securing American Greatness – a group aligned with Trump's political network and its mountain of funds – and several other Republican outside groups have been on the air amid the legislating, providing support to members in battleground districts. "Congressman Ryan Mackenzie just voted for working family tax cuts that mean higher wages and lower taxes for working families," saysone of the group's ads, running in support of the freshman representative from a swing district in Pennsylvania. The pro-Trump group, which spent nearly $8 million in June, is also at work hitting battleground Democrats over their opposition to the bill. "Congresswoman Marie Gluesenkamp Perez voted for a 22% tax hike on working families," saysanother spottargeting the Washington Democrat coming off two consecutive narrow elections. Matt Gorman, a Republican strategist, laid out the task ahead of Republicans. "This is the culmination of the best two weeks Trump has had since he became president," he said. "Now it's up to the GOP to sell this bill to a base that needs to turn out next November." GOP Rep. Troy Nehls of Texas, asked if he's worried about people losing health care, told reporters with a post-vote victory cigar in his hand: "It's just some Americans, who aren't Americans. Just illegals." CNN's Ali Main, Arlette Saenz and Aileen Graef contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

The battle to sway voters over Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’ begins

The battle to sway voters over Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' begins For months, more than a dozen Hill Republicans have been sou...

 

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