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Staggering new price tag revealed for Trump's ballroom as plans show massive scale

President Donald Trump unveiled the shocking new price tag of his glitzy ballroom makeover for the White House, new plans of which show how it has dramatically scaled up from its initial proposal.

The Daily Beast reported Wednesday that the two-story edifice will include sweeping staircases, residential quarters for guests, and a secure bridge connecting the new space to the presidential residence. On Tuesday, Trump "let it slip" that the project now carries a staggering price tag of $400 million, double the initial estimate.

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Melania Trump skips ceremony for fallen troops hours after her film trailer drops

First Lady Melania Trump made the last-minute decision to skip a solemn dignified transfer ceremony to honor two U.S. service members killed in action in Syria.

President Donald Trump, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and Chief of Staff of the Army General Randy George attended the ceremony for the Iowa soldiers on Wednesday.

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Trump skewered by analyst over 'single stupidest' statement in US foreign policy history

Bulwark editor Jonathan Last delivered scathing criticism of President Donald Trump on Wednesday after the president dropped his plan to escalate military pressure on Venezuela in a Truth Social post rant.

Last described in his Substack how White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles' revealing Vanity Fair interview, paired with Trump's most recent comments, laid the groundwork for a potential military offensive — and what the motives actually are behind them — "that Trump is seeking regime change in Venezuela."

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GOP lawmaker accuses Trump of lying like Bush to start a war: 'Same playbook'

Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) accused President Donald Trump of following former President George W. Bush's playbook by lying to the country to start a war.

"The framers understood a simple truth. To the extent that war-making power devolves to one person, liberty dissolves," Massie said during a Wednesday speech on the House floor. "If the president believes military action against Venezuela is justified and needed, he should make the case, and Congress should vote before American lives and treasure are spent on regime change in South America."

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'Break within MAGA': GOP lawmaker admits party dividing over Trump

A Republican lawmaker admitted Wednesday that MAGA is splintering over President Donald Trump and his policies.

Rep. Michael McCaul (R-TX) told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that even with the friction among lawmakers over the president, he still thinks Trump has power in the Republican party and 2026 midterm elections — but he has seen division growing among conservatives.

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Economist warns new jobs data shows stalled economy and rising recession risk

A grim new jobs report points to mounting economic trouble under the Trump administration, University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers warned Tuesday. He said unemployment has climbed to 4.6 percent, while wage growth weakens and earlier job gains appear poised for steep downward revisions. Wolfers told MSNOW that the economy may have created virtually no jobs since April, calling the labor market stalled or even slipping backward. Citing the Sahm Rule — a key recession indicator triggered when unemployment rises by half a point — Wolfers said the data suggests the U.S. is now on the cusp of a recession, adding that since April even Canada has added more jobs than the United States.

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'Just heard a single vertebra!' Johnson finally responds to Trump’s cruel Reiner comments

House Speaker Mike Johnson Wednesday was forced to respond to President Donald Trump's cruel comments on Hollywood legend Rob Reiner following the news that he and his wife were murdered.

Trump attacked Reiner, who was found stabbed to death with his wife Michele inside their Brentwood, California home, in a Truth Social post. He tried to suggest that Reiner's “massive, unyielding, and incurable affliction with a mind crippling disease known as TRUMP DERANGEMENT SYNDROME" was responsible for his death.

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Hegseth clashes with Mark Kelly in classified briefing over deadly Caribbean strikes

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth reportedly got into a heated confrontation with Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) during a classified briefing Tuesday as lawmakers pressed the Pentagon over lethal U.S. boat strikes in the Caribbean near Venezuela. According to Punchbowl News, Hegseth lashed out at Kelly by invoking a separate Pentagon probe into the senator over a video urging service members to refuse unlawful orders, prompting Kelly to interrupt and note the attack had nothing to do with his question. The clash comes as Hegseth faces mounting scrutiny from legal experts and lawmakers who warn the strikes may violate rules of engagement, while Kelly’s legal team accuses the administration of pursuing a politically motivated investigation against the combat veteran and senator.

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Jack Smith tells Jim Jordan there was 'proof' of Trump's crimes in private hearing

Former special counsel Jack Smith told lawmakers Wednesday in a closed door hearing that investigators had "developed proof beyond a reasonable doubt" that President Donald Trump had conspired to overturn the 2020 election results.

Portions of Smith's opening statement during the private meeting were obtained by the Associated Press.

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Democrats notch blowout win in Kentucky district Trump allies eyed as a flip

Democrats extended their special election hot streak Tuesday with a decisive landslide in Kentucky Senate District 37, a Louisville-area seat Republicans hoped to make competitive after a close 2024 presidential showing. Democrat Gary Clemons crushed GOP nominee Calvin Leach by nearly 50 points, easily outperforming Kamala Harris’s five-point margin in the district last year. The result underscores a broader trend of Democratic overperformance as President Donald Trump’s approval slides and economic pessimism grows, adding Kentucky to a string of recent Democratic wins and near-upsets across red and swing territory alike.

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Newborn's life saved by activist as terrified immigrant mom won't go to hospital

NEW ORLEANS — As immigrants in southeastern Louisiana and Mississippi braced for this month’s U.S. Homeland Security operation, Cristiane Rosales-Fajardo received a panicked phone call from a friend.

The friend’s Guatemalan tenant, who didn’t know she was pregnant, had just delivered a premature baby in the New Orleans house. The parents lacked legal residency, and the mother refused to go to a hospital for fear of being detained by federal immigration officers.

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'Resign!' Dem calls on Trump's FCC chair to step down during fiery Senate testimony

Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA) called on FCC Chair Brendan Carr to resign after he threatened the broadcast license of a small radio station in California.

"So in February, under your leadership, the Federal Communications Commission opened an investigation into a San Francisco radio station over its coverage of a federal immigration raid," Markey explained during Wednesday's Senate Commerce Committee hearing. "In a worst-case scenario, the FCC could shut down the station by revoking its license."

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Starving pregnant women ate mud as Trump aides whose cuts fueled crisis got $35K to travel

On July 18, a mild, overcast night in Nairobi, Kenya, a team of President Donald Trump’s top foreign aid advisers ducked into a meeting room at the Tribe Hotel, their luxury accommodations in the city’s diplomatic quarter, for a private dinner.

The visitors from Washington included Marcus Thornton, a former Border Patrol agent known for a series of public lawsuits against the Biden administration’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate; Kenneth Jackson, a former oil executive who had done a stint in government under the first Trump administration; and Laken Rapier, who’d previously managed communications for the city of Fort Worth, Texas. This year, all had been appointed to leadership roles in the U.S. Agency for International Development, the premier government humanitarian agency in the world.

Five months earlier, some of the visiting aides had celebrated USAID’s destruction over cake and speeches in Washington. With that job done, they’d embarked on a world tour of half a dozen cities, including the Kenyan capital. They were granted special permission to fly business class “to help ensure maximum rest and comfort,” according to an internal memo. Thornton alone received authorization to expense more than $35,000 in taxpayer money for the trip. The plan was to conduct exit interviews with USAID’s top experts, who were being forced out of the agency amid the administration’s stated commitment to austerity.

When the U.S. embassy in Nairobi learned of the visit, officials there arranged the dinner with a goal in mind. It would be their last opportunity to explain, face-to-face, the catastrophic impact of Trump’s drastic cuts to foreign aid.

A top concern: the administration’s failure to fund the World Food Program’s operation in Kenya, where about 720,000 refugees, among the most vulnerable people on earth, relied on the organization to survive. After providing $112 million in 2024, the U.S. abruptly cut off money in January without warning, leaving the program with no time to find adequate support or import the food needed for the rest of the year.

For months afterward, U.S. government and humanitarian officials warned Washington that the cutoff had led to increasingly dire circumstances. They begged Trump’s political advisers, including Thornton, to renew WFP’s grant and give the money it needed to avert disaster. The embassy in Nairobi sent at least eight cables to the office of Secretary of State Marco Rubio, explaining the situation on the ground and projecting mass hunger, violence and regional instability.

Those warnings went unheeded. Rubio, facing pressure from lawmakers and humanitarian groups, nevertheless publicly asserted that the agency’s mass cuts had spared food programs — even as the administration failed to fund WFP in Kenya behind the scenes. “If it’s providing food or medicine or anything that is saving lives and is immediate and urgent, you’re not included in the freeze,” Rubio told reporters on Feb. 4. “I don’t know how much more clear we can be than that.”

By the spring, WFP still had not received funding, ran low on supplies and would be forced to stop feeding many of Kenya’s refugees. In Kakuma, the third-largest camp in the world, WFP cut rations to their lowest in history, trapping most of the 308,000 people in the camp with almost nothing to eat.

They began to starve, and many — mostly children — died because their malnourished bodies couldn’t fight off infections, ProPublica found while reporting in the camp. Mothers had to choose which of their kids to feed. Young men took to the streets in protests, some of which devolved into violent riots. Pregnant women with life-threatening anemia were so desperate for calories that they ate mud. Out of options and mortally afraid, refugees began fleeing the camp by foot and in overcramped cars, threatening a new migration crisis on the continent. They said they’d rather risk being shot or dying on the perilous route than slowly starving in Kakuma.

To press the urgency of the situation in East Africa at dinner, the embassy officials enlisted Dragica Pajevic, a WFP veteran of more than two decades. Pajevic arrived at the Tribe Hotel early. She brought props. The bag slung over her shoulder held a collection of Tupperware containers with different amounts of dry rice, lentils and oil.

As they ate, she placed each container on the table. The largest represented 2,100 daily calories, what humanitarians like her consider the minimum daily intake for an adult. The next container showed 840 calories. That is what a fifth of refugees in Kakuma were set to receive come August. Another third would get just over 400 calories. Then she showed an empty container. The rest — almost half of the people in Kakuma — would get nothing at all.

Pajevic ended her presentation by relaying a truism that she said a government official in Liberia had once told her: The only difference between life and death during a famine is WFP and the U.S. government, its largest donor.

“The one who’s not hungry cannot understand the beastly pain of hunger,” Pajevic said, “and what a person is willing to do just to tame that beastly pain.”

The response was muted, according to other people familiar with the dinner. Jackson, then USAID’s deputy administrator for management and resources, said the decision to renew WFP’s grant was now with the State Department, and gave no indication he would appeal on the organization’s behalf. Thornton, a foreign service officer who ascended to a leadership post under Trump, did not speak. Instead, he spent much of the meal looking at his cellphone.

The dinner plates were cleared and the visitors headed to the airport. “They just took zero responsibility for this,” one of the attendees said, “and zero responsibility for what’s going to happen.”

The details of this episode are drawn from accounts by six people familiar with the trip, as well as internal government records. Most people in this article spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal. This year, ProPublica, The New Yorker and other outlets have documented violence and hunger due to the aid cuts in Kenya’s camps. But the scale of suffering throughout Kakuma — and the string of decisions by American officials that contributed to it — have not been previously reported.

The camp had seen similar spikes in pediatric malnutrition in recent years, but they were tied to natural causes, such as malaria outbreaks, extreme drought or COVID-19, according to staff of the International Rescue Committee, a U.S.-based nonprofit that operates Kakuma’s only hospital.

This was something different: an American-made hunger crisis. So far this year, community health workers have referred almost 12,000 malnourished children for immediate medical attention.

“What has come with Trump, I’ve never experienced anything like it,” said one aid worker who has been in Kakuma for decades. “It’s huge and brutal and traumatizing.”

In response to a detailed list of questions, a senior State Department official insisted that no one had died as a result of foreign aid cuts. The official also said that the U.S. still gives WFP hundreds of millions a year and the administration is shifting to investments that will better serve both the U.S. and key allies like Kenya over time. “We just signed a landmark health agreement with Kenya,” the official said, pointing to recent endorsements by government officials there. “That’s going to transform their ability to build their domestic capacity, to take care of their populations, to improve the quality of health care in Kenya.”

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