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Politics Jun 05, 2026

Coalition Lawsuit Targets US ‘Third‑Country’ Deportations to Equatorial Guinea

An international coalition of lawyers has filed a lawsuit with the African Commission on Human and …
Legal Challenge to US “Third‑Country” Deportations to Equatorial GuineaAn international coalition of human‑rights lawyers has lodged a complaint with the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights seeking an immediate suspension of U.S. deportations to Equatorial Guinea. The filing, made on 5 June 2026, targets the “third‑country” agreement enacted under the Trump administration that allows the United States to send migrants to a third nation when their home country will not accept them.Coalition Files Lawsuit at African Human Rights CommissionThe complaint was submitted on Friday and names 14 individuals who have either been detained in Equatorial Guinea or forced to return despite credible fears of persecution. The plaintiffs include U.S. advocacy groups—Asian Americans Advancing Justice, Global Strategic Litigation Council, and EG Justice—alongside the Gambia’s Institute for Human Rights and Development in Africa and the Tanzania‑based Pan African Lawyers Union.Six of the 14 claimants were repatriated within the last week, despite expressing fear of torture.Three were sent back after their home countries refused to receive them; contact with the remaining three has been lost.The lawsuit asks the commission to suspend further repatriations and to guarantee legal counsel for detainees.Deportation Numbers Highlight Scope of the IssueWhile exact figures are unclear, AFP estimates that about 32 people have been deported to Equatorial Guinea since the start of the policy last year. The complaint’s focus on 14 individuals underscores a broader, undocumented flow of migrants caught in the “third‑country” pipeline.Implications for US Immigration Policy and African Human Rights OversightIf the commission rules in favor of the plaintiffs, it could compel the United States to halt a key component of its mass‑deportation strategy, which the administration frames as essential for “border security.” The case also tests the reach of African regional human‑rights mechanisms over actions taken by a non‑African state.Potential Outcomes and Future Legal BattlesThe commission may either issue a binding suspension or refer the matter to the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights in Tanzania. A favorable ruling could set a precedent for challenging similar “third‑country” arrangements worldwide, while a dismissal may embolden further use of the policy despite ongoing criticism in the U.S. State Department’s 2024 human‑rights report, which cites credible reports of torture in Equatorial Guinea.
#United States #Equatorial Guinea #African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
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Politics Jun 05, 2026

Washington Plans to Centralize Visa Processing Across Africa

The U.S. State Department is proposing to cut the number of African posts handling routine visa int…
Executive Summary: US Plans to Trim Visa Outposts in AfricaThe United States is set to centralise visa processing across Africa, reducing the number of embassies and consulates that conduct routine visa interviews from roughly 50 locations to about 20. Embassies will remain operational for diplomatic work, but applicants in many countries will need to travel to designated regional hubs for their interviews. Consolidating Visa Interviews into Regional HubsThe proposal moves routine visa interviews out of most individual posts and concentrates them in a handful of larger centres. Expected hub cities include:Nairobi (Kenya)Johannesburg (South Africa)Addis Ababa (Ethiopia)Accra (Ghana)Dakar (Senegal)Embassies will continue to provide consular and diplomatic services, but will no longer host routine interview slots. Visa Issuance Numbers and Potential Cost ImplicationsIn fiscal year 2024, the State Department issued more than 540,000 non‑immigrant visas to African applicants, indicating strong demand for travel, study, and business. The restructuring does not alter legal eligibility criteria, but experts warn that additional travel, higher fees, and longer wait times could deter applicants, especially students, families, and small‑business owners. How the Shift Could Reshape US‑Africa MobilityAnalysts link the move to broader Trump‑administration goals: standardising decision‑making, strengthening fraud detection, and easing staffing pressures at overstretched posts. While diplomatic presence remains unchanged, the practical barrier of travelling to another country may reduce application volumes from nations that lose local processing facilities. What the Next Few Weeks May Bring for ApplicantsOfficials suggest the changes could take effect within the coming weeks, though a definitive rollout date has not been announced. Applicants should monitor announcements from their nearest embassy and prepare for potential increased travel costs and scheduling uncertainties.
#United States #Department of State #Africa
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World Wide Jun 05, 2026

Israel continues attacks on Lebanon despite US-brokered ceasefire

Israel has continued to launch attacks on southern Lebanon despite a new US-brokered ceasefire agre…
The Ongoing Conflict Israel has continued to launch attacks on southern Lebanon despite the two countries striking a new United States-brokered ceasefire agreement. At least five people were killed as Israeli warplanes and drones struck several towns on Friday, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported. The Israeli military also issued new forced displacement orders. The Attacks and Casualties The strikes hit residential areas, buildings and roads, while a major demolition was carried out in Bab al-Thaniya. Israeli warplanes also hit close to Jabel Amel Hospital, targeting the Bank Audi area. Two people were killed in Habboush, including a doctor. In Doueir, a young man was killed and another suffered serious injuries due to an attack by an Israeli warplane. A strike in the village of Qalawiya Tower killed one person and wounded another, while a drone killed a man sitting in a car in Kfar Reman. The Ceasefire Agreement The attacks followed closely on news that Israel and Lebanon had agreed to a new US-brokered ceasefire. The deal was announced by the Trump administration on Thursday, just weeks after a previous agreement to cease hostilities was announced on April 16. The Impact on Lebanon In the interval, however, more than 600 people were killed in Israeli strikes across Lebanon, while the Israeli military expanded its presence in the south of the country. It now occupies about one-fifth of Lebanese territory. The chance that the new deal will halt the hostilities appears highly unlikely, with the continued exchange of fire between Hezbollah and Israel appearing to bear out the pessimism. The Rejection of the Deal Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem was swift to reject the deal, as he had the agreement in April, dubbing it a “surrender and defeat”. The Iran-linked armed group said it had launched at least eight attacks against Israeli military positions in southern Lebanon between early Friday morning and Friday afternoon. The Diplomatic Efforts Andrea Dessi, assistant professor at the American University of Rome, told Al Jazeera that any agreement that excludes Hezbollah is destined to fail. “Any deal that excludes or completely ignores the prerogatives of key actors on the ground, primarily Hezbollah, but of course also Iran behind Hezbollah, is unfortunately destined to fail,” Dessi told Al Jazeera. He said diplomacy, nonetheless, remains the only viable path. “There is no military solution to all of these issues, including Lebanon, and therefore talks will continue.”
#Israel #Lebanon #US
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Environment Jun 05, 2026

Trump Administration Moves to Repeal Roadless Rule Protecting 58 Million Acres of Forests

The Trump administration is seeking to rescind the 2001 Roadless Conservation Rule, which safeguard…
Executive Summary: Threat to 58 Million Acres of Roadless ForestsThe Trump administration, through USDA Secretary Brooke L. Rollins, is moving to overturn the 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule, a bipartisan policy that has protected more than 58 million acres of national forest land from road construction and timber harvest.Administration’s Push to Rescind the 2001 Roadless Conservation RuleSince its inception, the rule has enjoyed massive public support—nearly 2 million comments were submitted, the majority favoring preservation. The current effort represents a broader Trump‑era agenda to open public lands to commercial logging and development.Scale of Protection and Potential Economic Impact58 million acres of forest land currently off‑limits to roads and large‑scale logging.In 2025, more than 320 million people visited national parks, with millions more using national forests for recreation.Over 180 million Americans rely on forested watersheds for clean drinking water; road building could increase treatment costs.Potential revenue for timber companies is estimated in the billions, but the rule’s removal could trigger costly lawsuits and remediation expenses.Ecological and Community Consequences of Rule ReversalRemoving the rule would expose critical habitats for species such as grizzly bears, wolves, and salmon, and could fragment ecosystems that support elk, mule deer, and countless other wildlife. Indigenous communities, exemplified by Charles F. Sams III and the Cayuse Nation, view the forests as a covenant tied to cultural identity and water stewardship.Increased road networks also raise sediment runoff, threatening water quality and raising utility bills for households downstream.What Comes Next: Legal Battles and Advocacy StrategiesEnvironmental groups and tribal leaders are mobilizing to file lawsuits, lobby Congress, and launch public‑awareness campaigns. The outcome will hinge on whether the administration can justify the rollback under the National Environmental Policy Act and whether the courts deem the rescission arbitrary.Stakeholders are urged to contact their representatives and the U.S. Forest Service to oppose the repeal, emphasizing that public lands belong to all Americans.
#Roadless Rule #Brooke L. Rollins #National Forests
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Science Jun 05, 2026

Scientists Warn of 'Flying Blind' Without US Ocean Monitoring System

The Trump administration's plan to dismantle the US ocean observation system could severely degrade…
The Threat to Ocean Monitoring The Trump administration's plan to dismantle an ocean observation system vital to understanding the climate crisis and marine ecosystems would “severely degrade” the accuracy of weather predictions and El Niño forecasts, with economic consequences for the US, European and American scientists have warned. The Ocean Observatories Initiative The Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI), run by the US National Science Foundation, is a vast network of seafloor systems, underwater gliders and moored surface platforms that feeds data to researchers, policymakers, educators and mariners worldwide. The initiative, which covers both US coastlines and extends into the North Atlantic and Southern Ocean, has been used to study marine heatwaves, harmful algal blooms, subduction zone earthquakes, ocean acidification and fisheries variability. The Data Analysis Decommissioning the US system, which plays a major part in a global ocean observation network, would lead to a massive increase in error in the annual estimates of ocean heating rates, according to research published last month. Removing US observations alone would produce a 163% increase in error for annual ocean heating rates. The Impact Analysis The loss of US observations, in a year predicted to be an El Niño year, with “supercharged” weather extremes, could also “lose the ability to see it coming clearly to act in time”. The stakes are concrete: farmers in the US and across South America use El Niño forecasts to decide what to plant and when – whether to expect drought or flooding shapes every agricultural decision months in advance. The Prediction “The US government wants to save less than a billion in sensors, which are the eyes and ears of the ocean” said Abrahams. “We have hundreds of billions in climate costs per year. The cost of the observation system is a fraction of the climate costs from hurricanes and storms that hit the US. ” The system, is, Abraham said is “quite an inexpensive way to reduce climate-related costs”.
#Ocean Monitoring #Climate Change #US Trump Administration
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Environment Jun 05, 2026

The Plant-Based Paradox: Why Meat Still Dominates Despite Growing Alternatives

Despite growing environmental awareness, improved plant-based alternatives, and health concerns, me…
The Plant-Based Paradox: Growing Alternatives vs. Meat Dominance Should I tuck into a juicy steak or stick a tofu patty in a bun and call it a burger? Twenty years ago, that question was largely seen as a moral dilemma influenced by grim conditions in factory farms and slaughterhouses. Back then, animal rights activists were the loudest campaigners arguing for people to abstain from meat. They had limited success because vegetarians and vegans made up less than 5% of the population in rich countries – and the best fake meats were bland replicas of real flesh. The word flexitarian had not yet made it into the dictionary. The debate has shifted sharply. The pollution from animal agriculture, which makes up 12-20% of planet-heating gas, is now part of public discourse around eating meat. A dramatic rise in rates of obesity and diseases linked to red meat have made health concerns part of individual decisions to eat less of it. Meanwhile, some plant-based alternatives have improved in texture and taste to the point where even meat lovers struggle to tell that they did not come from an animal. The Rise of Plant-Based Alternatives: Market Transformation In one sense, there is a powerful story of personal action to tell. The tiny market share of vegetarians in the early 2000s provided the demand that companies needed to invest in making substitutes taste better. These alternatives are now helping meat eaters reduce their intake – an easier sell than convincing people to give it up entirely. Add that to a growing awareness about the environmental harm that livestock cause, and a rise in public support for stopping climate breakdown, and you have the ingredients for what could be a major societal shift away from damaging levels of meat-eating. Early signs of the trend are visible in countries such as Germany, a sausage-hungry nation where about one in 10 people are vegan or vegetarian and a further 37% describe themselves as flexitarian. Plant-based alternatives have become so common that a third of the population buy them regularly, a government survey found in November, and discount supermarkets have launched their own brands. Village cafes in far-right regions seem perfectly happy to serve oat milk with coffee. The Meat Consumption Data: Global Trends and Statistics The broader picture, though, is still dominated by animals. Data in a new report from the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation suggests the average person eats six times as much chicken and twice as much pork as their grandparents did, with global meat supply having risen fourfold in the last 60 years. Much of the growth has taken place in poor countries in which better access to meat has helped counter hunger and malnutrition. But consumption is projected to keep rising, albeit at a slower rate, even in rich countries, where climate scientists and doctors recommend cutting down. Livestock are expected to contribute the vast majority of the projected 7.6% rise in global agricultural emissions over the next decade, at a time when global emissions from other parts of the economy, such as electricity generation, are set to fall. Industry Resistance and Consumer Behavior Patterns It is too early to tell whether the backlash signals a reversal or stalling of efforts to shift diets toward plants. In the UK, YouGov data shows the proportion of people who are vegetarians and vegans peaked in 2021 at 10% and has since fallen to 7%, while survey data in many other European countries suggests little change or even continued growth. The meat industry, meanwhile, is working hard to safeguard its dominance. In March, EU politicians voted to ban meaty names such as steak and bacon for plant-based alternatives. In the US, the "Make America Healthy Again" campaign from the Trump administration has enthusiastically promoted eating more meat, including many cow products such as beef tallow, going against medical advice. The pro-meat movement may also benefit from the protein obsession that has gripped rich countries, as well as growing fears about the health risks of ultra-processed food. Doctors are sceptical of the former – protein deficiencies in rich countries are rare, unlike fibre deficiencies – while there is little evidence to say much about the health impacts of processed plant-based products compared with processed meat ones. Future Outlook: Environmental and Health Implications The calculation is made more concerning by the indirect health impacts of meat-heavy diets, which stretch well beyond the risks to the person following them. Knock-on effects from the livestock industry range from stronger extreme weather events caused by climate breakdown to antimicrobial resistance that spreads superbugs. On Wednesday, an FAO report found that the use of antibiotics on livestock would rise by nearly a third in the next 15 years without government intervention, with potentially disastrous consequences for protection from disease. Health research is full of contradictory studies, and some advocates of meat-free diets have made sweeping claims that are not supported by the science. But what is clear, at a population level, is that people in rich countries are eating more meat and fewer plants than doctors consider healthy. And at a global level, the environmental harm from animal agriculture is likely to rise at a time when the planet needs it to fall.
#Plant-based diets #Meat consumption #Environmental impact
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World Wide Jun 05, 2026

Iran-Lebanon Conflict Escalates as Ceasefire Efforts Falter

Despite a US-brokered ceasefire agreement, Israel continues deadly strikes in Lebanon while Iran ra…
The Lead: Escalating Violence Despite CeasefireIsrael has continued to carry out deadly strikes across Lebanon despite the announcement of a new US-brokered ceasefire agreement reached by Lebanese and Israeli officials in Washington, DC. The violence has pushed the number of casualties higher, with Lebanon's Ministry of Public Health reporting that at least 3,526 people have been killed and 10,733 wounded in Israeli attacks since March 2.The Event Details: Diplomatic Efforts and RejectionsMeanwhile, Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem has dismissed the ceasefire as a 'farce', warning that northern Israel will remain a target as long as Israeli forces continue bombing Lebanon, raising more doubts about the prospects for a lasting truce.The Data Analysis: Rising Casualties and Regional ImpactLebanon casualties: At least 3,526 people killed and 10,733 wounded in Israeli attacks since March 2Oman oil terminal: Suspended crude oil loading operations at Mina al-Fahal terminal after explosion near berthsThe Impact Analysis: Regional Instability and Power DynamicsIran adviser flags concerns over draft deal: Mohsen Rezaei, an adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, said the draft memorandum of understanding being negotiated to end the war still contains 'ambiguities' that need to be clarified. Speaking to Iranian state television, Rezaei also accused US President Donald Trump of trying to pressure Tehran into accepting Washington's terms while keeping Iran's own conditions 'in a vague state'.Questions over US strategy: Reporting from Washington, DC, Al Jazeera's Kimberly Halkett said the White House is facing growing questions over why a negotiated agreement with Iran is still needed after President Donald Trump repeatedly claimed US military action had 'obliterated' Iran's nuclear programme. Halkett said critics are asking: 'If these military objectives have been achieved, then is there still a need for talks?' She added that 'with each passing week that this war drags on' and negotiations remaining stalled, it is becoming increasingly difficult for the administration to reconcile its claims of success with the continued push for diplomacy.Hezbollah rejects conditional ceasefire: Hezbollah leader Naim Qassem rejected the limited truce agreed to by Lebanese and Israeli representatives in the US, demanding a complete ceasefire and a full Israeli pullout from the country. Qassem also warned of more attacks on northern Israel, highlighting the difficulties in reaching a lasting peace. Both sides have blamed each other for breaking a previous ceasefire announced in April.Oman oil terminal disruption: Reuters reported that Oman has suspended crude oil loading operations at its key Mina al-Fahal terminal after an explosion near its single-buoy mooring (SBM) berths. Citing unnamed sources, the agency said the blast occurred between SBM 1 and SBM 2 and was allegedly caused by a drone attack.Trump says US does not need a deal to access Iran's uranium: The US president said Washington could access Iran's enriched uranium without reaching an agreement with Tehran, arguing the material is effectively 'entombed'. Trump also said he does not plan to meet Iran's Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, but he suggested a meeting could be possible if a deal is eventually reached, adding that 'if it happened ... I'd be respectful'.Ultra-Orthodox protest blocks major highway: Hundreds of ultra-Orthodox Israelis blocked Highway 1 in protest against the government's enforcement of military conscription for religious students, according to Israel's Channel 10. The demonstrations began after police stopped two ultra-Orthodox students and transferred one to military authorities. Large numbers of police and border guards were deployed to clear the highway and disperse protesters.Hezbollah rejection raises fears of escalation: Reporting from Beirut, Al Jazeera's Ali Hashem said Hezbollah remains the key actor on the Lebanese side when it comes to decisions about fighting and any potential halt to hostilities with Israel, 'regardless of what the Lebanese government says'. Given Hezbollah's rejection of the US-brokered ceasefire, Hashem warned that further escalation is likely from both Hezbollah and Israel. He noted that southern Lebanon and the western Bekaa Valley experienced significant Israeli air and ground attacks on Thursday, adding that Hezbollah's position suggests 'it is going to be a very difficult situation' in the days ahead.The Prediction: Escalation Likely Amidst Diplomatic StalemateWith Hezbollah rejecting the ceasefire conditions and continuing attacks, and Israel maintaining its military operations, the region appears headed toward further escalation. The diplomatic efforts to resolve the conflict with Iran remain stalled, with both sides expressing distrust and setting conditions that may be difficult to reconcile. The oil disruption in Oman also adds another layer of economic complexity to the already volatile situation.
#Israel #Hezbollah #Iran
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Environment Jun 05, 2026

Democratic States Weaken Climate Policies as Red States Lead Clean Energy Transition

Democratic-led states are rolling back ambitious climate initiatives while Republican states accele…
The Climate Policy Reversal in Blue States Democratic-led states are eroding their climate policies, as red states are scaling up their clean energy deployment. California on Friday scaled back its cap-and-invest program, offering more than $3bn in free pollution allowances to polluting companies. Earlier the same week, New York weakened its groundbreaking climate law, delaying a plan to regulate carbon from 2024 until 2028 and reducing emissions-slashing targets. Rhode Island's governor, meanwhile, is attempting to roll back aggressive clean-energy programs. The Economic Justification vs. Climate Imperative The moves come as Donald Trump's administration withdraws clean energy incentives and energy savings programs, and as energy prices spike across the country amid trade disruptions stemming from the US-Israeli war on Iran. Proponents have said the changes are necessary to suppress electricity costs, but climate advocates say that view is short-sighted and misguided. "Using affordability as a cudgel to weaken climate policy is a major error that will not solve either crisis, ultimately amplifying both," said Johanna Bozuwa, executive director of the Climate and Community Institute, a left-leaning thinktank. "Extreme weather and fossil-fuel dependency directly inflate costs – for food, energy, transportation, housing, and health – across the economy for working people." American Public Opinion on Climate Change Polls show most Americans are concerned about the climate crisis. An annual poll from Gallup, published in April, shows that 44% of American adults say they worry "a great deal" about global warming – one of the highest levels of concern since 1989, when the poll was first conducted, behind only 2020 and 2017. About 65% of registered voters in the US also think global heating is driving up the cost of living, according to a report published in December by Yale University and George Mason University. Red States Lead Clean Energy Buildout In contrast to many Democratic-led jurisdictions, red states have tended to dominate renewable energy deployment in recent years. In terms of growth of utility-scale renewables, states that voted for Donald Trump in the 2024 presidential election made up eight of the top 10 in the year to March, according to Energy Information Administration data. Indiana tops the list of states with the most clean energy capacity growth in that timeframe, followed by Kentucky and Utah. More broadly, though, it is Texas that has emerged as the country's leading clean energy superpower, despite its strong ties to the oil and gas industry and unsuccessful attempts within the Republican-led legislature to curb the growth of wind and solar. Texas leads the country in wind energy production, followed by fellow red states Iowa, Oklahoma and Kansas, and in March overtook California in utility-scale solar, too. The Paradox of Climate Leadership Meanwhile, the states scaling back their emissions-cutting policies have long called themselves climate leaders. When Governor Gavin Newsom of California extended his state's cap-and-invest program last year, he said: "We're doubling down on our best tool to combat Trump's assaults on clean air … by making polluters pay for projects that support our most impacted communities." The changes could end up giving more money to the fossil fuel producers and distributors who have been increasing consumers' energy prices amid the Iran war, said Bahram Fazeli, Policy Director with Communities for a Better Environment, a grassroots organization in California. "There's no reason to think that giving them more free allowances will actually help motivate them to lower gas prices more," he said. Long-Term Economic Implications New York advocates are also skeptical about whether the weakening of the 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act – which the state touted as among the strongest climate laws the country – will deliver long-term benefits. The state legislature last week reached a deal with Governor Kathy Hochul to remove a 2030 mandate to cut planet-warming pollution by 40% from 1990 levels, instead including language to aim for a 60% by 2040 if it is "feasible and cost effective" to do so. "Even though you might see bill savings initially, that's going to come at the cost of locked-in, higher energy costs in the future, as the grid has to procure more energy that would otherwise have been saved," Anna Johnson, a senior policy manager State at American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, told Baltimore's NPR affiliate WYPR; she estimates that the moves could ultimately increase households' electricity costs by $592m. The True Cost of Inaction The climate crisis itself also costs for working people, said Mar Zepeda Salazar, legislative director of the national environmental justice coalition Climate Justice Alliance. "You can lower costs on paper by weakening protections, but the bill still comes due," she said. "It just shows up in emergency rooms, insurance premiums, utility bills, lost wages, and disaster recovery – that families pay, not industry."
#California #New York #Climate Policy
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Politics Jun 05, 2026

Democrats Force Vote on Trump's $1.8bn Settlement Fund in 'Vote-a-Rama'

Democrats in the US Senate have forced a vote on President Donald Trump's $1.8bn settlement fund, a…
The Controversy Surrounding Trump's Settlement Fund Republicans in the United States Senate have renewed their push to pass a controversial $70bn immigration-enforcement funding bill, a top policy priority for President Donald Trump. However, the effort faced a series of hurdles, with Democrats forcing votes on several amendments that highlighted controversies related to the Trump presidency. The 'Vote-a-Rama' Process The rapid-fire votes on the amendments were dubbed a 'vote-a-rama', and they are slated to include issues ranging from Trump's White House ballroom to his tariff policies and the US-Israel war on Iran. 'Amendment after amendment, vote after vote, Republicans are going to have to answer to the American people,' Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said. The Data Analysis: Trump's $1.8bn Settlement Fund Early on, Republicans were forced to confront a topic that has dominated headlines in recent weeks: Trump's proposed $1.776bn 'anti-weaponisation' fund. The fund has been controversial on both sides of the aisle, with critics calling it a slush fund for Trump's allies. Several Republicans indicated that the optics of such a fund could be politically catastrophic ahead of November's midterm elections, and the Department of Justice has since backed away from the scheme. The Impact Analysis: Immigration Funding Bill The situation on Thursday was the result of a standoff between Democrats and Republicans over the Trump administration's approach to immigration enforcement. Democrats had pledged not to approve further funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), following the killing of two US citizens during immigration operations in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Prediction: Future of the Immigration Funding Bill If Senate Republicans remain unified, they are expected to pass the funding bill late Thursday night or early Friday. The Republican-controlled House of Representatives is expected to take up the bill shortly after.
#Donald Trump #US Senate #Chuck Schumer
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