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GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump has called for Republicans to shut down the government if they can’t pass the voting measure known as the SAVE Act. Many Democrats are pushing for an extension into December that would not include the SAVE Act, which is viewed as a non-starter in the Senate. “House Republicans don’t seem to have any plan for actually keeping the government open, so the Senate will step in,” Schumer said in floor remarks. “Many Republican House members, as many of you have reported, are smart enough to know if there is a shutdown, it will be a Republican shutdown. There never is a shutdown — hardly ever is a shutdown,” said Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, a Democrat from Illinois.
Persons: Chuck Schumer, Mike Johnson, Johnson, “ I’m, ” Johnson, we’ll, John Thune, Thune, ” Schumer, Schumer, , , Donald Trump, Republicans don’t, ” “, I’m, ” Trump, isn’t, Dick Durbin, CNN’s Morgan Rimmer Organizations: Washington CNN, GOP, CNN, Republicans, SAVE, , Trump, Truth, Republican Locations: Illinois
WASHINGTON — House Republicans on Wednesday are expected to derail their own plan to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month, with the party divided over the length of a short-term funding bill and what, if anything, should be attached to it. Democrats, who want a “clean” three-month funding patch with nothing attached, and nearly all plan to vote no. But the overwhelming majority of rank-and-file Republicans back Johnson’s move, saying holding the vote will put lawmakers on record. Everyone.”Davidson, who was ousted in July from the far-right House Freedom Caucus, lamented that Republicans have failed to unify behind a plan weeks before the election. That would buy time for bipartisan negotiators to strike a longer-term funding deal during the lame-duck session for fiscal year 2025 — if a short-term bill can pass the House.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Donald Trump, , , noncitizens, Johnson, he’s, Mike Rogers, Warren Davidson, ” Davidson, , , Trump, ” Johnson, Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer, John Duarte, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Tom Cole, Schumer, Cole, he's Organizations: WASHINGTON —, Republicans, Wednesday, SAVE, CRs, Armed, , Caucus, CNBC, Democrats, Democratic, GOP Locations: Ohio, Ky
Read previewFor Wall Street, policy — not politics — is the motto leading up to November. Death and taxesUnsurprisingly, tax policy is at the top of money managers' minds, according to Frank Kelly, senior political strategist at DWS. The filibusterThere's an under-the-radar issue keeping portfolio managers up at night: the elimination of the filibuster, according to Kelly's conversations with clients. Wall Street analysts expect a very close election, and even a minute change could be enough to push the needle on the outcome for either candidate. Given how important gridlock is to the market, there's not enough conversation around the impacts of eliminating the filibuster, Kelly believes.
Persons: , Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, DWS, Frank Kelly, Harris, Trump, David Bianco, Bianco, Goldman Sachs, Chuck Schumer, Kelly, Monica Guerra, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management's, it's, Jack Ablin, Washington doesn't Organizations: Service, Asset Management, Business, Trump, Jobs, DWS, Wall Street, Morgan Stanley Wealth, Cresset Capital Management, White, Washington, Democrats, Republicans Locations: DWS Americas
Washington CNN —The House failed on Wednesday to pass a six-month GOP government funding plan that included a controversial measure targeting noncitizen voting, an effort pushed by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. The House vote was 202 to 220, with 14 Republicans voting against it, two Republicans voting present and three Democrats voting for it. Johnson would not reveal on Wednesday ahead of the planned vote what he would do if the GOP government funding plan fails and said he has spoken to Trump “a lot” about government funding after the former president floated a government shutdown. Trump had previously said that if Republicans don’t receive “absolute assurances” about election security, they should not pass a funding extension. The six-month funding plan from House Republicans would have extended government funding until March 2025.
Persons: Donald Trump, Mike Johnson, Trump, Republicans don’t, ” Trump, Johnson, CNN’s Manu Raju, ” Johnson, , you’re, , “ We’re, there’s, Mike Lawler, Raju, There’s, John Thune, Chuck Schumer, Schumer, ” Schumer, Steve Scalise, – Trump, Kamala Harris –, Joe Biden, , ” Scalise, Ted Barrett, Danya Gainor, Annie Grayer, Michelle Shen Organizations: Washington CNN, Republican, Democrat, Republicans, SAVE, Truth, GOP, Trump, , noncitizens, , Service, Democratic Locations: New York, Trump’s Florida
Democrats, who represent most of those areas, fiercely objected at the time, accusing the GOP of using tax policy to wage a culture war. Schumer has vowed that if he’s still majority leader next year he will ensure the SALT cap expires at the end of 2025. I am glad to hear that former President Trump now feels the same way,” Lawler wrote on X. “Donald Trump and Mike Lawler, who helped elect him, are the reason we even have a limitation on the SALT deduction. The anti-debt Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projected that eliminating the SALT cap would raise the cost of extending the 2017 tax law by $1.2 trillion.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Donald Trump, Trump, “ I’ve, Chuck Schumer, Schumer, he’s, Ryan Ellis, ” Ellis, Karoline Leavitt, America’s, Kamala, Harris, Mike Lawler, Trump’s, , ” Lawler, Mondaire Jones, ” Jones, “ Donald Trump, Lawler hasn’t, Josh Gottheimer, Gottheimer, Liam Donovan, Kamala Harris Organizations: White, Trump, NBC News, Republican, House Republicans, New York GOP, Seniors, , Democratic, Federal Budget Locations: New, Long, New York , New Jersey, California, New York, Jersey
The vote was 51-44, falling short of the 60 needed to break a filibuster, with Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine again voting with Democrats in favor of the bill. Senate Minority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., dismissed it as “another show vote” and vowed that “Republicans support IVF, full stop.”“This is not an attempt to make law. She predicted that Democrats would “lift the filibuster” to get around the 60-vote requirement, which would require 50 senators to vote to change the rules. Katie Britt, R-Ala., and Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that would cut off Medicaid funding for states if they prohibit IVF.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Chuck Schumer, Donald Trump, Harris, Republican Sens, Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins of, Doug Mills, New York Times Harris, Donald Trump’s, ” Trump, John Thune, , ” Thune, ” Sen, Tammy Duckworth, Duckworth, ” Duckworth, Sen, JD Vance, Schumer, Trump, Vance, ” Vance, Taylor Van Kirk, Sens, Katie Britt, Ted Cruz Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republican, New York Times, Democratic, ABC, Congress, Alabama, NBC News, Republicans Locations: Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine, Philadelphia, Alabama, R, Ohio, Texas
WASHINGTON — Speaker Mike Johnson said the House will vote Wednesday on a six-month stopgap funding bill linked to legislation requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote — the same package he abruptly pulled off the floor last week amid growing GOP opposition. Johnson, a Louisiana Republican, spent the weekend calling members and trying to flip GOP defections to the yes column. "Mr. Speaker Johnson, you know as well as everyone else that your plan is a no-go as currently written. A six-month CR with poison pills is not going to fly in a narrowly divided government," Schumer said. "If the hard right thinks that we will willingly give them leverage to ram Project 2025 down the American people's throats early next year by agreeing to a six-month CR, they are dreaming," he added.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Mike Johnson, Johnson, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, ” Johnson, , , he'll, I'm, Chuck Schumer, Schumer Organizations: Louisiana Republican, , Democratic, Locations: Louisiana
WASHINGTON — Congress is considering boosting funding for the Secret Service after what the FBI called an apparent second attempt on former President Donald Trump’s life in 10 weeks. "Nobody's going to want to deny the Secret Service the funding that it needs as long as it justifies it." And Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, the 2016 Democratic vice presidential nominee, agreed that both parties would be "very amenable" to any Secret Service funding request. Trump's Secret Service detail on Sunday thwarted what the FBI characterized as a second apparent assassination attempt on him while he was golfing at his club in West Palm Beach, Florida. “One thing I want to make clear, the Secret Service needs more help.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, they’re, protectees, Chuck Schumer, ” Sen, Susan Collins, Ron Rowe, Trump, Collins, Sen, Tommy Tuberville, Mike Johnson, Johnson, Ron Johnson, “ That’s, , Jack Reed, Tim Kaine, Ryan Wesley Routh, Routh, Joe Biden, God ”, Biden, Lindsey Graham, Graham, Richard Blumenthal, Conn, he’s, “ We’re Organizations: WASHINGTON, Service, FBI, Republican, Committee, Fox News, Trump, Homeland Security Committee, Secret, Homeland Security, Senate Armed Services, NBC News, Democratic, AK Locations: WASHINGTON —, Maine, Virginia, West Palm Beach , Florida
Read previewWith less than 50 days until the election, Senate Democrats are putting Republicans — and Trump — in the hot seat on IVF. On Tuesday, Senate Democrats are bringing the Right to IVF Act to a second vote, just 3 months after Republicans in the chamber first shot it down. They want to pressure Trump to stand by his promise to support IVF and urge his Republican colleagues to vote in favor. "If Donald Trump and Republicans want to protect people's right to access IVF, they can vote yes on it," Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who sponsored the legislation, told CBS News. Trump jumped in to voice his support of the procedure, and by May, two GOP senators were introducing a package to protect IVF access, though Democrats rejected it, arguing it didn't go far enough.
Persons: , Trump, Chuck Schumer, Trump's, Kamala Harris, Ohio Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump, Illinois Sen, Tammy Duckworth, they've, didn't, Schumer Organizations: Service, Republicans —, Trump, Business, CBS News, NBC News, Republican Party, Republicans, Democrats, Alabama Locations: Illinois
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer on Monday pressed for Republicans to join Democrats in voting to advance the IVF bill. Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon objected, and instead urged their colleagues to support Democrats’ bill during Tuesday’s vote. Another Senate GOP bill aimed at addressing concerns about IVF was introduced earlier this year. On Tuesday, Democratic Sen. Patty Murray blocked a uninamous consent request to pass Britt and Cruz’s IVF bill, ahead of the vote on the Democrats’ broader IVF package. “Our bill is the only bill that protects IVF access while safeguarding religious liberty,” Britt said.
Persons: Lisa Murkowski, Susan Collins, Donald Trump, Chuck Schumer, “ We’re, ” Schumer, , John Thune, , Democratic Sen, Tammy Duckworth, Patty Murray, Cory Booker of, GOP Sen, Rick Scott, Ron Wyden, Kat Cammack, Katie Britt, Ted Cruz’s, Britt, Murray, Cruz, ” Britt, we’ve, ” CNN’s Aaron Pellish Organizations: Washington CNN —, Republicans, Democrat, GOP Sens, Republican, Democratic, Illinois, Alabama’s, GOP, Oregon, Democrats, Health Savings Locations: Washington, Cory Booker of New Jersey, Florida
WASHINGTON — Divided House Republicans stumbled last week in their effort to pass Speaker Mike Johnson’s bill to fund the government. “A government shutdown is always a bad idea, at any time,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told reporters. The speaker’s initial strategy had called for a six-month continuing resolution (CR) tied to the SAVE Act, legislation backed by Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump requiring proof of citizenship to vote. It’s unclear whether Johnson this week will try to tweak the SAVE Act approach or try something entirely different. Republicans see the SAVE Act as a mechanism to try to force politically vulnerable Democrats into a difficult position.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, They’ll, , Mitch McConnell, Johnson, he’s, , Sen, John Cornyn, ” Cornyn, ” Johnson, Donald Trump, JD Vance, Ohio, Mike Rogers, we’re, Joe Biden, Chuck Schumer, ” Schumer, “ You’ve, Thomas Massie, it’s “, ” Massie, Jon Tester, ” Tester, it’s, noncitizens Organizations: Republicans, GOP, SAVE, Republican, Trump, CRs, Armed Services, NBC, Capitol, Locations: WASHINGTON, Ky, Texas
Washington CNN —Speaker Mike Johnson is once again facing a major challenge as he navigates a government funding fight while under pressure from an extremely narrow majority in the House and former President Donald Trump. The course the speaker charts could also factor into whether he can hold onto his leadership post after the election. Trump has also waded into the funding fight, a dynamic that could further complicate the effort to avert a shutdown. But the plan is viewed as a non-starter in the Senate and faces opposition within the House GOP conference as well. “You’ve seen the chaos in the House because Speaker Johnson is trying to do this in a partisan way, guided by the far right.
Persons: Mike Johnson, Donald Trump, Trump, Republicans don’t, , Johnson, ” Johnson, “ We’re, Chuck Schumer, , ” Schumer, “ You’ve, He’s, Schumer, ” CNN’s Ted Barrett, Lauren Fox, Aaron Pellish Organizations: Washington CNN, Congress, GOP, Republicans, Louisiana Republican, SAVE, Trump, Democratic Locations: Louisiana, , New York
Following Donald Trump’s lead, Johnson has tied a six-month funding bill to the SAVE Act, which would overhaul voting laws to require people to show proof of citizenship when registering to vote. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., Democrats and some Republicans are pushing for a “clean” funding bill that would keep the government open until December, after the election. The government will shut down at 12:01 a.m. on Oct. 1 unless Republicans and Democrats strike a deal to extend funding. Because of their miniscule majority, House Republicans can only afford four GOP defections if all lawmakers vote. “I’m a firm NO on bankrupting the nation and a YES on election integrity,” Mills said.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Donald Trump’s, Johnson, Chuck Schumer, Joe Wilson, Cory Mills, Jim Banks, Matt Rosendale, Andy Biggs of, Tim Burchett, “ I’ve, ” Burchett, ” Mills, Trump, don’t Organizations: WASHINGTON, SAVE, Democrats, Republicans, GOP, CRs, Armed Services, Foreign Affairs Locations: Cory Mills of Florida, Jim Banks of Indiana, Matt Rosendale of Montana, Andy Biggs of Arizona, Tennessee, , China
Speaker Mike Johnson on Wednesday pulled a temporary government funding bill off the House floor hours before a planned vote amid dissent within his own party. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has blasted Johnson's spending bill and his insistence to tie it to the controversial proposal. The only way to reopen the government is for lawmakers to pass a spending bill. The shutdown lasted 35 days, causing 800,000 federal employees to go without pay and costing the federal government billions of dollars. Trump is advocating for a shutdown, calling on fellow Republicans to only accept a spending bill if it includes promises of election security.
Persons: , Mike Johnson, Johnson, Chuck Schumer, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, what's, there's, Government shutdowns, couldn't, Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, Trump, don't, servicemembers, Bill Clinton, Clinton Organizations: Service, Wednesday, Associated Press, Republican, Business, SAVE, Veterans Affairs, Trump, Democratic, Department of Homeland Security, National Parks, SNAP, Government, Republicans, shutdowns, The Washington Post Locations: Washington
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Mike Johnson’s strategy to tie a short-term government funding bill to a Donald Trump-backed proposal to overhaul voting laws was on life support Monday after a band of conservative rebels vowed to vote no on the package. Without a stopgap funding bill, money will run out and the federal government will shut down at the end of the month. Because of the GOP’s razor-thin majority, Johnson, R-La., can afford only four Republican defections if all members vote. Mills slammed Johnson's strategy as a “farce” and said it would do nothing to secure the southern border. Instead, they are pushing for a "clean CR" — short-term funding with nothing attached to it.
Persons: Mike Johnson’s, Donald Trump, Johnson, — Cory Mills, Matt Rosendale, Tim Burchett, Jim Banks, Thomas Massie, Trump, Mills, , ” Mills, Rosendale, , Chuck Schumer, Joe Biden, ” Schumer, Jamie Raskin, ” Raskin, … Donald Trump Organizations: WASHINGTON, Republicans, White, Capitol, Senate, GOP, House, Republican, , Locations: Florida, Montana, Tennessee, Indiana, Kentucky
Former President Donald Trump on Tuesday said congressional Republicans should pursue a government shutdown if they cannot attach a hardline voting bill to the temporary funding resolution that would keep the government open. "The House Republican CR is an unserious and uncooked product," Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said on the Senate floor Tuesday. That same day, the House approved the rule for the CR, which would fund the government until March 2025, with the SAVE Act included. The final House vote to pass the funding bill is set to take place on Wednesday. But even if it passes, the bill would still be dead on arrival in the Democratic controlled Senate.
Persons: Donald Trump, don't, Mike Johnson, Chuck Schumer, Johnson, Trump's, Mitch McConnell, McConnell, Sahil Kapur Organizations: Trump, Republican, Congressional Democrats, Republicans, SAVE, Democratic, Senate, NBC Locations: New York City, U.S, Ky
A shutdown would close federal agencies and national parks, while limiting public services and furloughing millions of workers just weeks before the election. House Republicans have now settled on some lines of attack, which they'll highlight in politically charged GOP hearings and investigations into both Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. House GOP probesAfter spending much of the 118th Congress focused on investigating Biden, House Republicans are now shifting their focus to Democrats’ new presidential ticket. Republicans are also focusing on the botched U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021, which the Trump campaign has criticized Harris over. The Trump campaign responded by calling the story "fake news."
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Tim Walz, Mike Johnson, it’s, Johnson, Republicans ’, Chuck Schumer, Patty Murray, Biden, Walz, Trump, McCaul, Antony Blinken, ” There’s, The, Jamie Raskin, Robert Garcia, Abdel Fattah El, , Schumer Organizations: WASHINGTON, Capitol, Republicans, Harris . House Republicans, Minnesota Gov, Republican, SAVE, GOP, noncitizens, Democratic, House Republicans, Education Department, Chinese Communist Party, The Biden, Energy, Biden, Harris Energy, Veterans Affairs Committee, Harris Administration, Democrats, Trump, Washington Post, Justice Department, NBC News Locations: Afghanistan, Trump, Minnesota, China, Egypt
watch nowAs the 2024 U.S. elections reach their home stretch, crypto companies are opening their wallets to try and influence the results. Nearly half of all the corporate money flowing into the election has come from the crypto industry, according to a report this week from the nonprofit watchdog group Public Citizen. More than 90% of the corporate crypto cash that's been raised was brought in this election cycle. Public Citizen's report found that of the 42 primary races that attracted money from crypto-backed super PACs, the candidate picked by the crypto industry won 36. "When Fairshake and its affiliates spend money to influence races, either by attacking crypto skeptics or boosting crypto supporters, the ads don't mention crypto at all," said Claypool.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Rick Claypool, Coinbase, Andreessen Horowitz, Crypto, Brian Armstrong, Fairshake, It's, Claypool, Chuck Schumer, Kamala Harris's, Joe Biden, Harris, Faryar Shirzad, Trump, CNBC hasn't Organizations: Public Citizen, Securities and Exchange Commission, Republican, Senate, Supreme, Citizens, Federal, PAC, Public, CNBC, Trump, White Locations: Nashville , Tennessee, New York, California, cryptocurrencies, San Francisco, Nashville, United States
When George Helmy is sworn in next month as Robert Menendez’s temporary replacement in the Senate, he will be joining a chamber where Democrats hold a razor-thin majority, outnumbering Republicans by a single seat, 50 to 49. Mr. Helmy was selected last week by Gov. Mr. Helmy, however, is new to the Democratic Party. Mr. Helmy will serve in Washington only through November. His appointment will return the Democratic majority to 51 members, as it was before Mr. Menendez resigned on Tuesday.
Persons: George Helmy, Robert Menendez’s, Helmy, Philip D, Murphy, Menendez, Tammy Murphy, New Jersey’s, Chuck Schumer, Biden Organizations: Senate, Gov, Democrat, Democratic Party, Democratic Senate, New, Democratic, Democrats Locations: Murphy of New Jersey, Morris County, N.J, Washington, New York
Stabenow chairs the Senate Agriculture Committee, where a bipartisan crypto bill is working its way through the committee. Because we all support Vice President Kamala Harris to be our next president, and we all believe in the future of crypto," said Schumer. But Stabenow's presence with Schumer at Wednesday's town hall could be a hint that Schumer is leaning towards Stabenow's legislation. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is newly catering to the crypto sector in public addresses on the campaign trail. "I think we're going to hear from Vice President Harris soon on this.
Persons: Chuck Schumer, Kamala Harris, Saul Loeb, Schumer, Mark Cuban, Kristen Gillibrand, Debbie Stabenow, Stabenow, Elissa Slotkin, Adam Schiff, Jared Polis, Wiley Nickel, Crypto, Sheila Warren, Harris, Gillibrand, Donald Trump, Ro Khanna, Nickel, we've Organizations: Senate, AFP, Getty, Democratic, New, Agriculture, California ., California . Colorado Gov, Rep, Republicans, Capitol, Crypto, Innovation, Democrats, Financial Innovation, Technology, Republican, CNBC Locations: Washington , DC, Michigan, California, California . Colorado, N.C, United States, Wednesday's, Nashville , Tennessee, Tennessee
Amid his ongoing effort to solidify his image as pro-family (but not in a "weird" way), Vance on Sunday floated a generous $5,000 child tax credit during an interview on CBS' "Face the Nation." Advertisement"I'd love to see a child tax credit that's $5,000 per child. Related storiesThe current child tax credit allows up to $2,000 per child. AdvertisementThere's bipartisan support for an expanded credit in the House. In early August, the Senate voted 48-44 on the expanded child tax measure, meaning it did not advance.
Persons: , Sen, JD Vance, Donald Trump's, he's, Vance, Margaret Brennan, Chuck Organizations: Service, Ohio Republican, Democratic Party, Business, CBS, GOP, Democratic, Senate Locations: Washington
Trump and JD Vance, Kamala Harris and her allies say, are “weird.”It started with Gov. Tim Walz of Minnesota, now Harris’s running mate. They want to be in your exam room.”Democrats immediately embraced Walz’s characterization of the former president and his running mate. Pete Buttigieg, the secretary of transportation, said Trump was getting “older and stranger.” Gov. Josh Shapiro of Pennsylvania called Trump “weird” at a rally for Harris, as did Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, who also said that Vance was “erratic.”
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald, , , Trump, MAGA, JD Vance, Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, Walz, Pete Buttigieg, Josh Shapiro, Harris, Chuck Schumer, Vance Organizations: Republican Party, Trump, Democratic Party, Gov, Republican, MSNBC, Pennsylvania Locations: America, Minnesota, New York
The rally in Bozeman was Trump’s first since Vice President Kamala Harris officially secured the Democratic nomination and selected Minnesota Gov. “We need the Senate,” Trump told the crowd Friday, stressing the critical nature of the contest here. “His really is valor,” Trump said of Sheehy, who served in Iraq and Afghanistan, among other deployments. Trump used the attention to toss a familiar laundry list of attacks against Harris, Walz and Democrats more broadly. “You can imagine if President Trump had to call Chuck Schumer and try to figure out how to get his nominees through,” Daines said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Sen, Jon Tester, Trump’s, Kamala Harris, Tim Walz, ” Trump, Trump, Matt Rosendale, Tim Sheehy, , Ronny Jackson, Jackson, Tester, , Donald Trump’s, , Harris, Walz, Ohio Sen, JD Vance, Vance’s, Vance, I’m, Sheehy, ” Vance, ” Walz, mispronounced Harris, ” “ Kamala, Kamala, she’s, Montana Sen, Steve Daines, Daines, Chuck Schumer, ” Daines, Sherrod Brown’s, CNN’s David Wright Organizations: Montana CNN, GOP, Democratic, Minnesota Gov, Trump, Senate, Navy, Senate Veterans ’ Affairs, White, Veterans Affairs Department, ” New Democratic, Republican, Marine Corps, ABC, Army National Guard, Congress, National Republican Senatorial Committee, Montana Republicans Locations: Bozeman, Montana, Rosendale, Texas, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Iraq, Afghanistan, Florida, Lago, Minnesota, nonjudicial, ” The Montana, Ohio
Refresco accuses Prime of failing to order the required amount during the first year of the contract, incurring a penalty payment. It's not the only lawsuit Prime is facing. In late April, a class-action lawsuit was filed accusing the brand of mislabeling the amount of caffeine in each drink. Prime filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit. A similar lawsuit filed in 2023 was voluntarily dismissed.
Persons: , Logan Paul —, Refresco, Paul, Ksi, It's, Sen, Chuck Schumer, they're, dink Organizations: Service, Business, Bloomberg, Refresco, Olympic, Paralympic, Games, USA Locations: Delaware, United States
The GOP’s 2024 party platform calls for the repeal of President Joe Biden’s executive order on AI, which Republicans say "hinders AI innovation." Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks to NBC News from the balcony of his Capitol office on Thursday, Aug. 1. “We have lots of AI proposals in the defense bill because AI has national security concerns,” Schumer told NBC News. It would require federal agencies to assess the potential risks of using AI before purchasing or deploying AI systems. But it also has real problems,” Schumer said, referring to the Future of AI bill.
Persons: Chuck Schumer, Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Schumer, Trump, ” Schumer, , “ We’re, , Joe Biden’s, “ Donald Trump, Frank Thorp V, TikTok, Sen, Mitt Romney, Brian Schatz, chatbot ChapGPT, Schumer —, , Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, Sundar Pichai, Sam Altman, Jensen Huang, Martin Heinrich, Todd Young, Mike Rounds, Rounds, ” Rounds, Gary Peters, Thom Tillis Organizations: New, New York Democrat, NBC News, Republican, Democratic, Republicans, NBC, Big Tech, National Defense, Senate, 118th, National Institute of Standards, Technology, NIST, Senate Homeland Security, Star Locations: WASHINGTON, Harris, New York, eyeing, Republic, Congress, China, U.S, R, Utah, Hawaii, Sens
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