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Day 1756: "Did nothing but complain."
Today in one sentence: The Senate voted to advance a bipartisan bill to end the nationâs longest government shutdown after eight Democrats broke ranks to join Republicans; the Trump administration told the Supreme Court that it plans to keep fighting to block a court order requiring full November SNAP payments for 42 million Americans; Trump demanded that air traffic controllers âget back to work, NOW!!!â and warned that anyone who didnât would be âsubstantially âdockedââ; Trump urged Senate Republicans to divert Affordable Care Act subsidies from insurers to individuals, saying the money should âBE SENT DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE SO THAT THEY CAN PURCHASE THEIR OWN, MUCH BETTER, HEALTHCAREâ; Trump promised âa dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!)â from tariff revenue; Trump pardoned Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows, and 77 others accused of trying to overturn the 2020 election; Trump was booed while leading a military enlistment oath at Sundayâs Washington Commanders game, hours after reports that he wants the teamâs planned D.C. stadium named for him; the Supreme Court rejected an effort to overturn its 2015 decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide; and the Supreme Court will decide whether states can count mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day.
1/ The Senate voted to advance a bipartisan bill to end the nationâs longest government shutdown after eight Democrats broke ranks to join Republicans. In doing so, Democrats abandoned their core demand to extend Affordable Care Act subsidies set to expire at the end of the year. Without congressional action, monthly premiums are expected to rise by about $300 to $400 for many middle-income families starting in January. Roughly 24 million people who buy coverage through the Affordable Care Act marketplace would have to pay full price, and several million could lose coverage altogether. Democrats had held firm for nearly six weeks, insisting on an extension of the subsidies in exchange for reopening the government. But in the end, the eight senators who crossed party lines accepted a deal that offered no concessions beyond a non-binding promise for a December vote on the issue that is unlikely to draw enough Republican support to pass anyway. Nevertheless, the eight said they broke ranks because the shutdown was hurting workers and families. âThis was the only deal on the table. It was our best chance to reopen the government,â Senator Jeanne Shaheen said. They pointed to missed paychecks, layoffs, and stalled food aid to defend their votes, even as the deal left the Democratsâ central priority unaddressed. The measure funds most agencies through January 30 and provides full-year funding for agriculture, veterans, and congressional operations, while reversing layoffs and guaranteeing back pay for federal workers. The vote exposed divisions within the Democratic Party, with Senator Bernie Sanders calling it âa very, very bad vote,â while Rep. Ro Khanna saying, âSenator Schumer is no longer effective and should be replaced.â Schumer, who voted against the deal, pledged to âkeep fighting.â Although House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries defended Schumerâs leadership, he said Democrats would oppose the measure in the House. Speaker Mike Johnson, meanwhile, told lawmakers to return to Washington âright now,â saying Trump was âvery anxiousâ to reopen the government and would sign the bill once it passes. The House is expected to vote later this week. If approved, the measure could end the 41-day shutdown by midweek. (New York Times / Washington Post / Politico / Associated Press / Axios / Wall Street Journal / Bloomberg / CNBC / NBC News / ABC News)
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đ˘ Democracy doesnât run on vibes. Do something that matters.
- Make your voice heard â call your senators.
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Dick Durbin (IL) â D.C. (202) 224-2152 | Local (312) 353-4952
Tim Kaine (VA) â D.C. (202) 224-4024 | Local (757) 518-1674
John Fetterman (PA) â D.C. (202) 224-4254 | Local (215) 241-1090
Jeanne Shaheen (NH) â D.C. (202) 224-2841 | Local (603) 647-7500
Maggie Hassan (NH) â D.C. (202) 224-3324 | Local (603) 622-2204
Catherine Cortez Masto (NV) â D.C. (202) 224-3542 | Local (702) 388-5020
Jacky Rosen (NV) â D.C. (202) 224-6244 | Local (702) 388-0205
Angus King (ME) â D.C. (202) 224-5344 | Local (207) 622-8292
2/ The Trump administration told the Supreme Court that it plans to keep fighting to block a court order requiring full November SNAP payments for 42 million Americans. The move came even after a federal appeals court on Sunday rejected the administrationâs argument that paying the full amount would cause greater harm to the government than withholding food aid to millions of people, writing that âthe government sat on its hands for nearly a month.â Justice Ketanji Brown Jacksonâs temporary hold on the payments, however, remains in place until Tuesday while the Court reviews the administrationâs filing. Over the weekend, USDA had ordered states to âimmediately undoâ steps to issue full benefits. That guidance was blocked by a federal judge today, calling it legally questionable. The administration claims it can only make partial payments during the shutdown, which courts have called âimplausibleâ given decades of precedent that kept food aid flowing even when the government closed. (Politico / ABC News / Reuters / Associated Press / NBC News / Bloomberg / Washington Post / NPR / New York Times / Axios / Wall Street Journal / CNBC)
3/ Trump demanded that air traffic controllers âget back to work, NOW!!!â and warned that anyone who didnât would be âsubstantially âdocked.ââ The controllers have been working without pay for more than a month during the government shutdown, but theyâre expected to receive back pay once the shutdown ends. Trump, however, said he would recommend $10,000 bonuses for those who worked throughout the shutdown and called them âGREAT PATRIOTS,â while criticizing others who âdid nothing but complain.â The FAA, meanwhile, ordered airlines to cut flights at 40 major airports to ease strain on unpaid controllers as cancellations neared 2,000 on Monday. The controllersâ union said the workforce was being used as a âpolitical pawnâ and warned that âfatigue has led to the erosion of safety.â (Wall Street Journal / CNBC / Axios / Associated Press / Politico / Washington Post / New York Times)
4/ Trump urged Senate Republicans to divert Affordable Care Act subsidies from insurers to individuals, saying the money should âBE SENT DIRECTLY TO THE PEOPLE SO THAT THEY CAN PURCHASE THEIR OWN, MUCH BETTER, HEALTHCARE.â Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, however, said there was âno formal proposalâ and that discussions would wait until the shutdown ends. The plan, which National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said was just Trump âbrainstorming,â would require congressional approval and offered no explanation on how payments would replace existing insurance coverage. (Washington Post / New York Times / CNBC / Axios / NBC News)
- Federal Housing Finance Agency Director Bill Pulte said the Trump administration is âworking onâ a 50-year mortgage after Trump called it âa complete game changer.â The plan would stretch the standard 30-year loan with no details on how it would cut costs or meet federal lending rules. Analysts, meanwhile, said it would increase total interest payments and slow homeownersâ ability to build equity. (The Hill / USA Today / Axios)
5/ Trump promised âa dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!)â from tariff revenue. He gave no details on eligibility or timing, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he hadnât spoken to Trump about it and that the â$2,000 dividend could come in lots of forms.â The plan would require congressional approval, since only Congress can authorize federal spending. Treasury data show about $195 billion in tariff revenue collected so far this year, but $2,000 payments to most adults would cost roughly $300 billion. Even with an income cutoff of $100,000, about 150 million people would qualify, leaving a funding gap of more than $100 billion as the Supreme Court questions the legality of the tariffs themselves. (CNN / Wall Street Journal / Bloomberg / Axios / Politico / The Guardian / ABC News)
6/ Trump pardoned Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows, and 77 others accused of trying to overturn the 2020 election. The Nov. 7 proclamation granted a âfull, complete, and unconditional pardonâ for conduct tied to creating alternate elector slates and challenging the election results, but excluded Trump himself. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt claimed that those pardoned were âpersecuted and put through hell by the Biden Administration for challenging an election.â None of the recipients were convicted of federal crimes, making the pardons largely symbolic. However, state prosecutions in Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and Wisconsin remain ongoing. (NBC News / USA Today / NPR / Axios / Bloomberg / Politico / Wall Street Journal / ABC News / Washington Post / CNN / New York Times)
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Ghislaine Maxwell, convicted in Jeffrey Epsteinâs sex trafficking ring, is seeking a commutation from Trump while reportedly receiving âconcierge-styleâ treatment in prison, according to whistleblower documents sent to House Judiciary Committee Democrats. Democrats said her meeting with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche and subsequent privileges suggest unusual access and influence inside Trumpâs Justice Department. The White House, however, declined to say whether her request is under review. (Politico / NBC News / The Hill / CBS News)
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Trump pardoned former Tennessee House Speaker Glen Casada and his aide Cade Cothren, who were convicted of using a fake firm to profit from taxpayer-funded mailers. Casada had been sentenced to three years in prison and Cothren to two and a half after a federal jury found them guilty of wire fraud and money laundering. The White House claimed the Biden Justice Department âover-prosecutedâ the case, though the investigation began under Trump and the sentencing judge was his own appointee. (NBC News / The Guardian / Washington Post)
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A convicted drug trafficker whose sentence Trump commuted in 2021 was sent back to prison for 27 months after a judge found he assaulted a nanny and a nurse and violated his release terms. Jonathan Braun used family ties to Jared Kushner to help secure the clemency. (New York Times / NBC News)
7/ Trump was booed while leading a military enlistment oath at Sundayâs Washington Commanders game, hours after reports that he wants the teamâs planned D.C. stadium named for him. Trump, the first sitting U.S. president in nearly 50 years to attend a regular-season NFL game, reportedly conveyed his naming request through a White House intermediary to team owners planning the nearly $4 billion project on federally owned land at the former RFK Stadium site. (ESPN / Associated Press / The Guardian)
⨠WELL, THATâS FANTASTIC.
8/ The Supreme Court rejected an effort to overturn its 2015 decision legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide. The order left in place a lower-court ruling that former Kentucky clerk Kim Davis, acting as a state official, violated same-sex couplesâ constitutional right to marry when she refused to issue them licenses after the Obergefell v. Hodges decision, citing her religious beliefs. Davis was ordered to pay $360,000 in damages and fees. (Associated Press / New York Times / NBC News / CNN / NPR / Politico / Washington Post)
9/ The Supreme Court will decide whether states can count mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day. The case tests whether Election Day ends when voters cast their ballots or when officials receive them, and the outcome could determine how millions of votes are handled in federal races and whether states must change their long-standing mail ballot rules before 2026. Mississippiâs law allows ballots received within five business days to be counted, which the 5th Circuit struck down for violating federal law. Mississippiâs Republican leaders are defending the law against a challenge from the Republican National Committee, which argues that counting late ballots âextends the electionâ beyond the day set by Congress. Mississippi warned that the lower courtâs ruling could cause âchaosâ before the 2026 elections and force nationwide changes to how votes are counted. (New York Times / Politico / Bloomberg / NBC News)
- Federal Judge Mark Wolf resigned, accusing Trump of âusing the law for partisan purposesâ and warning of an âexistential threat to democracy.â His departure came as Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawyers the administration was waging a âwarâ against ârogue activist judges.â The White House said judges with âpersonal agendasâ should resign if they wish to criticize the administration. (New York Times / Axios / The Atlantic)
âď¸ Notably Next: Your government has been shut down for 41 days; the 2026 midterms are in 358 days.
A political newsletter for normal people
WTF Just Happened Today? is a sane, once-a-day newsletter helping normal people make sense of the news. Curated daily and delivered to 200,000+ people every afternoon around 3 pm Pacific.
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