Inside the 24 hours that Trump willed his agenda bill over the finish lineNew Foto - Inside the 24 hours that Trump willed his agenda bill over the finish line

After nearly 20 hours straight of working the phones – using both threats and assurances to cajole Republicans into supporting his sweeping domestic agenda bill – President Donald Trump seemed to grow exasperated while watching coverage of the plodding floor process on television. "What are the Republicans waiting for??? What are you trying to prove??? MAGA IS NOT HAPPY, AND IT'S COSTING YOU VOTES!!!" Trump posted on social media at midnight, as the vote seemed stalled. Fourteen hours later, the bill had passed, with only two Republican defections. Trump is expected to sign it in a major ceremony on Friday afternoon at the White House – punctuated by a fly-over of the B-2 bombers who dropped bunker-buster bombs on Iranian nuclear facilities last month, according to a White House official. The spectacle will only underscore what a consequential stretch of days it has been for the president, who now appears at the height of his political power roughly six months into his second term. Last week's Supreme Court decision paved the way for even more expansive use of executive authority. His strikes on Iran's nuclear sites appear to have created new momentum toward a ceasefire deal in Gaza. A NATO summit last week, tailored to his preferences, resulted in new defense spending commitments after years of pressure from Trump. At home, Trump is presiding over an economy that continues to create jobs, despite continued unease over the threat of tariffs. His hardline immigration enforcement tactics, decried by opponents as inhumane or illegal, have reportedly brought down unlawful crossings at the US southern border to historic lows. "I think I have more power now, I do," Trump said outside Air Force One Thursday, hours after his agenda bill passed the House. To Trump's detractors, his unshakeable grip on Republicans and his strong-arming of US allies abroad add up to an authoritarian-in-waiting, unchecked by the systems in place to ensure the country doesn't descend into autocracy. But to his supporters, the last two weeks have amounted to a thrilling culmination of his unlikely return to power and a rapid-pace fulfillment of the promises he made to his voters last year. "He's getting his agenda passed to a greater extent than he did his first term. He has better control over the apparatus," said Asa Hutchinson, the former Arkansas governor who challenged Trump for the presidency last year. "Part of it, I think, is that he's a second-term president, and he knows how to wield that power and use the office of the president. And you got a Supreme Court that's backed him up," Hutchinson went on. "It's a very powerful position that he's in. People recognize that. He also recognizes he has a very short amount of time, because he's only got four years now." No longer restrained by skeptical members of his own party, Trump is free to pursue his agenda and interests in ways that even some Republicans worry will come to haunt them in next year's midterm elections. Both supporters and opponents of Trump's bill seem to agree that — for better or worse — the measure passed Thursday will now form a major part of Trump's domestic legacy. It passed after intensive involvement from the president himself, who appeared acutely aware of the stakes for his own presidency and took to calling lawmakers into the night to convince them to vote yes. A senior White House official called Trump "the omnipresent force behind this legislation." "Dinner after dinner, engagement after engagement at Mar-a-Lago — you know, those relationships, and the president's focus on relationships, carried us through in kind of a cascade here," the official said, adding they had lost count of the number of meetings Trump held on the bill. Democrats have already begun formulating plans to tether Trump and Republicans to the new law's changes to Medicaid, singling out individual cases of Americans' deprived of care. Their argument was encapsulated by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries' marathon speech on the House Floor on Thursday. "Leadership requires courage, conviction, compassion — and yet what we have seen from this administration and co-conspirators on the Republican side of the aisle is cruelty, chaos and corruption," Jeffries said in his address, which broke a record for the longest floor speech in modern history. Polling shows Americans are broadly skeptical of the bill, creating a task for Trump in the months ahead to change perceptions of the bill he worked assiduously to get passed. He could be aided by the bill's strategic sequencing, which enacts the tax cuts in the near-term but pushes off major changes to Medicaid and food assistance programs until after next year's midterm elections. Yet recent history is littered with presidents who, after using congressional majorities to push through major legislation meant to burnish their legacy, later lamented not doing enough to sell the bill to the American public – after their party members paid the price at the ballot box. Trump did, at various points over the last week, appear concerned that slashing the social safety net too deeply might pose political challenges for Republicans. "I don't want to go too crazy with cuts," he told CNN on Tuesday. "I don't like cuts." Even in private, Trump has told Republicans that making changes to Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security would be a losing political message, according to officials. In conversations with Republican lawmakers, White House officials sought to emphasize that changes to Medicaid wouldn't be felt for years, giving states and hospitals time to sort through the changes. Officials also reminded lawmakers that states had a significant role in dictating how Medicaid dollars are spent, and therefore control how and whether individuals lose coverage. Officials said Trump's team had taken lessons from a failed attempt to repeal Obamacare in 2017, working with Republicans on messaging and trying to present them with a clearer view into why the bill would work. Still, Trump's priority has largely been getting his own agenda enacted, not the political fortunes of Republicans in Congress. Any worries about next year's election were mostly put to the side as Trump squeezed GOP holdouts using both charm and threats of political retribution. White House officials privately acknowledged that the Democratic messaging on the bill has been effective, but noted that the focus from their party so far has not been on messaging, but on getting the bill passed. "We now have to shift to explaining the bill and how it will benefit our voters," one official said. "We are confident once we get that messaging across, the public perception of the bill will shift." From the beginning, Trump and his allies framed support for the bill as a loyalty test, advising senators in an official notice last week that failure to pass the measure would amount to an "ultimate betrayal." Trump treated Republican holdouts harshly, threatening to support primary challengers to Sen. Thom Tillis and Rep. Thomas Massie after the said they would oppose the bill. Ultimately Tillis announced last week he would retire, opting out of Trump's test of fealty. He warned from the Senate floor afterward that Trump had been "misinformed" about the effects of his bill, calling it "inescapable this bill will betray the promise Donald Trump made." Trump's hardline approach shifted Wednesday, when he hosted House Republicans at the White House. In those sessions, he appeared to adhere to an old adage as he worked to convince lawmakers to vote for his mega-bill: you catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. In meetings in the Cabinet Room and Oval Office, a magnanimous Trump signed place cards, took photos and paid his visitors compliments on their television appearances, according to people familiar with the sessions. He handed out mementos and showed guests around the constantly redecorated Oval Office. But he was also firm that after weeks of back-and-forth between the two chambers of Congress, there would be no more changes to the bill. "He wanted to get this done, and that was clear," one lawmaker who met with Trump said. "The message he sent to all of them was very clear, that this bill has been negotiated a lot, but there's not going to be any more changes to it," Rep. Steve Scalise, the House Majority Leader, said Thursday on Capitol Hill. "The time for that is over, and I think it took them still a few hours after to realize he was serious." When discussing the bill, the president urged the lawmakers to maintain GOP unity and avoid giving Democrats a victory by denying him his signature legislation, one person familiar with the meetings said. Outside Air Force One on Thursday evening, Trump said he offered "no deals – what I did is we talked about how good the bill is." And while Trump's threat of backing primary challenges to opponents of his bill remained ever-present in many Republicans' minds, the president opted to leave the warning mostly unsaid as he cajoled members in the West Wing on Wednesday. "The president was wonderful, as always," Tennessee Rep. Tim Burchett said in a video posted after the two-hour meeting. "Informative, funny, he told me he likes seeing me on TV, which was kind of cool." However, as the night went on and lawmakers argued at the Capitol, one source briefed on the conversations with conservative members said it was conveyed that if members held up this bill, they would be primaried – a message that moved some members towards a vote. "He is in the strongest position of anybody in generations – probably ever – in terms of impacting primaries for Congress," the source said. "So anybody coming from a hard-right district, which is most of the conference, will have to deal with that. And he's just not going to tolerate anyone going against his agenda." A White House official pushed back on the notion that there were any direct primary threats but acknowledged that the prospect always loomed over conversations. One person familiar with the meetings with House lawmakers said Trump spoke about the importance of the bill to Republicans' agenda and argued that economic growth would eclipse any concerns about expanding the deficit — arguments he and his team have been making publicly. He also promised hardline fiscal hawks he would use his executive authorities to vigorously enforce certain phaseout provisions for green energy tax credits to convince them to vote yes. "He did a masterful job of laying out how we could improve it, how he could use his chief executive office, use things to make the bill better," Rep. Ralph Norman of South Carolina, who originally planned to vote against the legislation but ultimately supported it, said on CNBC. Some Republicans had been vocal in their opposition to the Senate's slower timeline to phase out some energy tax credits, and Norman said it was important for them to get assurances on that from the White House. He said it was a major sticking point in the final hours of deliberations. "Up until late in the night, we were negotiating, you know, things that could change with, you know, the tax credits, which all were put in by Joe Biden, which needed to be extinguished," Norman said. In the dark hours of Thursday morning, Trump's patience in convincing holdout Republicans seemed to be wearing thin. "FOR REPUBLICANS, THIS SHOULD BE AN EASY YES VOTE," he wrote at 12:45 a.m. ET. "RIDICULOUS." A few phone calls later, the holdouts had relented. And Trump's signature bill was on track to pass. The headline of this story has been updated. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Inside the 24 hours that Trump willed his agenda bill over the finish line

Inside the 24 hours that Trump willed his agenda bill over the finish line After nearly 20 hours straight of working the phones – using both...
Trump signs executive order calling for foreign tourists to pay higher national park feesNew Foto - Trump signs executive order calling for foreign tourists to pay higher national park fees

President Trump signed an executive order Thursday calling on the national park system to charge higher entry fees for foreign visitors. It instructs Interior Secretary Doug Burgum — who oversees the National Park Service — to "develop a strategy" to hike entrance fees and recreation pass fees for non-U.S. residents at any national park that currently charges for entry. "To fund improvements and enhanced experiences across the park system, I've just signed an executive order to raise entrance fees for foreign tourists while keeping prices low for Americans," Mr. Trump said in a Thursday evening rally in Iowa. "The national parks will be about America first." CBS News has reached out to the Interior Department and the National Park Service regarding when the fee hike may take effect or how much the surcharge for nonresidents could cost. In its 2026 fiscal yearbudget proposalreleased in May, the Interior Department estimated that such a surcharge would generate more than $90 million annually. Not all national parks charge an entrance fee, and for those that do, the fee varies. Generally, visitors can purchase either a standard daily or weekly pass to one specific park, or an annual pass that can be used at one park or in a certain region of the country. The Park Service also offers a more comprehensive "America the Beautiful" pass, which costs $80 and can be used at all national parks nationwide. Some of the National Park Service's most popular sites — like Yellowstone, Yosemite and the Grand Canyon — charge entrance fees of $20 per person or $35 per vehicle. Mr. Trump also ordered the Interior Department to give U.S. residents "preferential treatment" over foreign visitors regarding "recreational access rules, including permitting or lottery rules" that parks might have in place. The order did not detail what those preferential treatment rules would entail, but some popular national parks have reservation systems for entry and camping during peak seasons. The order Thursday also revokeda memorandumsigned in January 2017, at the tail end of former President Barack Obama's second term, which sought to promote diversity and inclusion at national parks. The move appeared to be part of the ongoing effort by the Trump administration to scale back the federal government's diversity efforts. The latest moves come as the Trump administration has sought toreduce the sizeof the National Park Service's staff. Itlaid off about1,000 Park Service employees in February as part of its push, led by the White House's Department of Government Efficiency, to enact large-scale personnel and budgetary cuts across the federal government. According to analysis releasedthis weekby the National Parks Conservation Association, an independent advocacy group, the Park Service has lost 24% of its permanent staff since President Trump took office in January. In its 2026 fiscal year budget, the Interior Department also proposed cutting more than $1 billion to the Park Service, which would be the largest such budget cut in the agency's history. And in a separate executive order Thursday, the presidentalso establishedthe "Make America Beautiful Again" Commission, which will be tasked, among other things, with "expanding access to public lands and waters for recreation and incentivizing voluntary conservation efforts." The commission will be chaired by Burgum and made up of members of the Trump administration. The order itself was spearheaded by Benji Backer, founder and CEO of the group Nature Is Nonpartisan. "It's an honor to lead this nonpartisan initiative with the White House," Backer said in a statement Thursday. "Today is a great victory for the environment, but this is just the beginning." In aJune 19 interviewwith CBS News, Backer was critical of a language in early Senate versions of Mr. Trump's "big, beautiful, bill" that would have allowed thousands of acres of public lands to be sold for housing and infrastructure development. That languagewas eventually removedfrom the version of the bill that passed the House on Thursday and heads to the president's desk for his signature. "Just because something isn't a national park or a national wilderness area, doesn't mean that it doesn't deserve to be in public hands," BackertoldCBS News at the time. "Donald Trump's legacy will not be good on conservation if this goes through." Bryan Kohberger Pleads Guilty | "48 Hours" Podcast CBS News journalists describe what it was like to report on Sean "Diddy" Combs trial Skydiving plane crashes in New Jersey, several hospitalized

Trump signs executive order calling for foreign tourists to pay higher national park fees

Trump signs executive order calling for foreign tourists to pay higher national park fees President Trump signed an executive order Thursday...
Blue Jays finish 4-game sweep of Yankees to take sole possession of first place in AL EastNew Foto - Blue Jays finish 4-game sweep of Yankees to take sole possession of first place in AL East

There is only one first-place team in the AL East right now, and it's the Toronto Blue Jays. With an 8-5 win over the New York Yankees on Thursday, the Blue Jays completed a sweep of their division rival and took over sole possession of first place in the process. Their record sits at 49-38 with the Yankees and Tampa Bay Rays each one game behind them at 48-39. The@BlueJayscomplete the sweep and sit alone atop the AL East!pic.twitter.com/DrJFjTE7fZ — MLB (@MLB)July 4, 2025 It's been nearly a decade since Toronto was in this position. The last time it held full control of first place in July or later was 2016, when it led the division for much of August and early September before the Boston Red Sox took over. In this case, the Jays got there with a four-game series that went from highly anticipated to downright cathartic. The first game was close, the second turned into a blowout,while the third game was nearly a disaster. Thursday's game was a back-and-forth. The Blue Jays struck first with an Addison Barger RBI double in the first inning, then Trent Grisham homered to tie the game in the third. George Springer hit a two-run homer to put Toronto ahead again in the bottom of the third, but New York responded with a two-run rally in the fourth. The big hit came in the game's longest at-bat. With two runners in scoring position, leadoff hitter Nathan Lukes faced off against Yankees reliever Clayton Beeter, who took over after starting pitcher Clarke Schmidt left the game with forearm tightness. He quickly fell behind 0-2, then fouled off eight pitches to stay alive. On the 14th pitch of the at-bat, Lukes hit the go-ahead double. FOURTEEN PITCHES LATER...Lukes Delivers!pic.twitter.com/rjS5fZRkQ5 — Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays)July 4, 2025 Barger added a solo homer an inning later to make it a three-run lead, which the Yankees cut to one with a two-run rally in the seventh inning. They nearly threatened again in the eighth, and then Cody Bellinger swung at a pitch flying toward his chest. The umpire ruled that Cody Bellinger swung at this pitch that hit him which ended the inningpic.twitter.com/U3w0KEwoh7 — Talkin' Yanks (@TalkinYanks)July 4, 2025 Springer homered again in the bottom of the eighth to put Toronto comfortably ahead. Across the series, the Jays designated hitter was 8 for 14 with four homers, four walks and 11 RBI. ANOTHER SPRINGER DINGER 😱pic.twitter.com/u0aKpJl51A — MLB (@MLB)July 4, 2025 Few expected the Blue Jays to be in this position as the All-Star break nears. The dominant conversation around the team in the offseason wasn't whether they would contend, it was whether they should sell if they couldn't convince star first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to stay long term. They checked off the extension box with a $500 million contract extension, but they're now in the process of trying to do something even harder. The peripherals, such as a plus-nine run differential (the Yankees are plus-100 and the Rays are plus-69), suggest they may be overperforming, but there has been some legitimate progress with this group, with breakout seasons by Barger and third baseman Ernie Clement. Staying ahead in the AL East will be a hard task, but just getting to this position more than three months into the season was arguably even harder. As recently as May 28, the Blue Jays were eight full games behind the Yankees. Toronto also has one of the easiest stretches going into the All-Star break, with series against the Los Angeles Angels, Chicago White Sox and Athletics.

Blue Jays finish 4-game sweep of Yankees to take sole possession of first place in AL East

Blue Jays finish 4-game sweep of Yankees to take sole possession of first place in AL East There is only one first-place team in the AL East...
What we know about the death of Liverpool soccer star Diogo Jota and his brotherNew Foto - What we know about the death of Liverpool soccer star Diogo Jota and his brother

Thesoccerworld is in mourning following the death ofLiverpoolandPortugalstarDiogo Jotain a car crash in Spain early on Thursday morning. He was 28. His brother, André Silva – who was also a professional footballer – also died in the accident at the age of 25. Jota married his long-term partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he has three children, less than two weeks before the crash. The incident occurred around 12:30 a.m. local time on the A-52 road in Zamora, northwestern Spain, and was caused by a "burst tire while overtaking," the country's Guardia Civil said on Thursday. The vehicle that Jota and his brother were in left the road and subsequently caught fire, officials said. It is not known which brother was driving the car, which Spanish media reported was a Lamborghini. The authorities identified the remains based on documents recovered at the scene of the accident, as well as the car's license plate, CNN Portugal reported. Further forensic testing at a morgue in Zamora confirmed the brothers' identities, according to CNN Portugal. For investigation, the remains were moved to the nearby town of Puebla de Sanabria, a source close to the sub-delegate of the Spanish government in Zamora told CNN. The players' family was present in Puebla de Sanabria on Thursday afternoon to finalize the administrative requirements which allow the remains to be released and returned to Portugal, CNN Portugal reported. A source from the Government Sub-delegation in Zamora told PA that the crash is being investigated as "a possible speeding incident." A wake for Jota and André Silva's family began on Friday morning at a church in the brothers' hometown of Gondomar, near Porto, the church told CNN. It added that the doors at the Igreja Martiz de Gondomar will open to the public on Friday afternoon. A funeral is set to take place on Saturday at 10 a.m. local time (5 a.m. ET), the church said. Jota played an important role in the Liverpool team which lifted the Premier League trophy just over two months ago, equaling the English record of 20 top-flight titles. He featured in 26 of the club's 38 league games, scoring six goals and providing four assists. In total, he scored 65 goals across five years on Merseyside, also winning one FA Cup and two EFL Cups. Jota was part of the Portugal national team which won the Nations League in June this year, having also won the competition in 2019. André Silva played for Futebol Clube de Penafiel in the Liga Portugal 2, the country's second division. In total, he scored 12 goals and contributed 10 assists in 105 matches at full and youth level throughout his career. Tributes from the soccer world came flooding in throughout Thursday. Portuguese great Cristiano Ronaldo wrote that his compatriot's death "does not make sense," while former Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp, who signed Jota for the club in 2020, offered "prayers, thoughts and power" to Jota and André Silva's family. Current Liverpool manager Arne Slot also paid his respects, writing: "When the time is right, we will celebrate Diogo Jota, we will remember his goals and we will sing his song. For the time being, we will remember him as a unique human being and mourn his loss. He will never be forgotten." Tributes also came in from beyond soccer, from the likes of NBA star LeBron James and the United Kingdom's Prince William, who said he was "deeply saddened." CNN's Alan Goodman and Duarte Mendonca contributed to reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

What we know about the death of Liverpool soccer star Diogo Jota and his brother

What we know about the death of Liverpool soccer star Diogo Jota and his brother Thesoccerworld is in mourning following the death ofLiverpo...
Trump plans to send 10 letters a day dictating tariff rates to other countriesNew Foto - Trump plans to send 10 letters a day dictating tariff rates to other countries

WASHINGTON –President Donald Trumptold reporters he would start sending out letters to other countries as early as July 4 dictating their tariff rates to sell products in the United States, rather than negotiating scores of individual trade deals. "My inclination is to send a letter out saying what tariff they're going to be paying," Trump said July 3. "It's just much easier." His comments came asa July 9 deadline approachesfor the reimposition of hefty tariffs on countries around the world. His announcement of worldwide tariffs in April sent the world's financial markets spiraling before he paused thefees for 90days for most countries. Since then, Trump has announcedtrade deals with Vietnamandthe United Kingdom, and theframework for a deal with China. He aims for 10% baseline tariff and greater fees for specific countries based on U.S. trade deficits with them. But he has said he is unwilling to extend his deadline and it would be difficult to negotiate deals with 170 other countries. Disputes remain with major trading partners such as Canada, Mexico and the European Union. "How many deals can you make?" Trump said. "You can make more deals, but they're very much more complicated." "It's just so many countries," he added. Trump said countries seeking deals begin talking about specific products such as beef or ethanol, but that he would prefer to have flat tariff rates of 20%, 25% or 30% for each country. "I'd rather send out a letter saying this is what you're going to pay to do business in the United States," Trump said. Trump said he expects to send out about 10 letters per day, starting July 4. "I'd rather just do a simple deal where you can maintain and control it," Trump said. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Trump plans to send 10 letters a day dictating tariff rates to countries

Trump plans to send 10 letters a day dictating tariff rates to other countries

Trump plans to send 10 letters a day dictating tariff rates to other countries WASHINGTON –President Donald Trumptold reporters he would sta...

 

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