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Bret Baier: Trump's strike on Iran 'changed the entire dynamic'

Bret Baier: Trump's strike on Iran 'changed the entire dynamic'

Fox News5 hours ago

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More than 30 celebrities come out against SNAP, Medicaid cuts in GOP megabill
More than 30 celebrities come out against SNAP, Medicaid cuts in GOP megabill

The Hill

time28 minutes ago

  • The Hill

More than 30 celebrities come out against SNAP, Medicaid cuts in GOP megabill

More than two dozen members of the entertainment industry issued an open letter to members of Congress on Wednesday urging them to reject sweeping cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Medicaid in the GOP's 'big, beautiful' spending bill. The open letter, released by Feeding America, was signed by 31 people, including high-profile Hollywood stars like Matt Damon, Scarlett Johansson, Michelle Williams, Alan Cumming, Kristin Chenoweth, Sheryl Crow, Live Schreiber and others. The letter notes that millions of people rely on SNAP and Medicaid 'to make ends meet,' adding, 'These programs make it possible for them to live more healthily and with dignity, in turn helping communities across America to thrive.' 'Congress is now considering a bill that would make some of the largest cuts to SNAP and Medicaid in U.S. history — taking 9.5 billions of meals a year through SNAP off the table and pushing hundreds of thousands of people off Medicaid and into food insecurity,' the letter reads. 'This is unacceptable and wrong. it is not how people in this country treat each other when facing hard times,' the letter continued. 'We call on Congress to reject cuts to these vital programs that help millions put food on their tables and provide access to health care.' The final version of President Trump's agenda-setting bill is not set in stone, as the Senate is currently considering its own version of the House-passed tax and spending megabill and is slated to make significant changes. The lower chamber will then need to vote to adopt the updated blueprint. Both Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) have voiced optimism they will be able to get the legislation to Trump's desk by a self-imposed July 4 deadline. The House-passed bill would tighten eligibility requirements for SNAP and require states to cover a portion of benefit costs, which Democrats have argued could lead to states cutting benefits on their own. The initial bill also included major Medicaid reforms estimated to lead to millions of people losing coverage by 2034. Among a host of changes, the bill would require states to impose stricter work requirements to be eligible for the program and would shorten the open enrollment period for the Affordable Care Act. The Senate parliamentarian in recent days has also struck down various provisions in the upper chamber's draft legislation, including the SNAP cost-sharing proposal.

Meta is adding AI-powered summaries to WhatsApp
Meta is adding AI-powered summaries to WhatsApp

TechCrunch

time33 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Meta is adding AI-powered summaries to WhatsApp

Meta announced on Wednesday that it's adding an AI-powered summaries feature to WhatsApp. The optional new feature uses Meta AI to summarize unread messages in a chat. This summary would only be visible to you, not others in your chat, the company notes. The feature builds on the AI technology that Meta released in April, which allowed the company to implement AI features that don't impact encryption or user privacy. 'Message Summaries uses Private Processing technology, which allows Meta AI to generate a response without Meta or WhatsApp ever seeing your messages or the private summaries. No one else in the chat can see that you summarized unread messages either,' the company said in a blog post. Image Credits: Meta Meta is initially rolling out the feature in the U.S. with English language support. It will reach more countries and languages later this year. Until now, users could access Meta AI within the chat to ask general questions or tag a message to give the chatbot context. However, Meta AI couldn't read your messages. Meta said that the new stack allows WhatsApp to access context from your chat privately to process requests through its AI. This allows it to summarize messages or provide writing suggestions. Techcrunch event Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW The new AI-powered features are available under a new setting that can be accessed via Settings > Chats > Private Processing, which lets you turn on or off individual functions.

Democratic-led states sue Trump administration over funding cuts
Democratic-led states sue Trump administration over funding cuts

The Hill

time37 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Democratic-led states sue Trump administration over funding cuts

A group of 21 Democratic-led states filed a Tuesday lawsuit against the Trump administration for arbitrarily cutting grants allegedly misaligned with an agency's goals. Plaintiffs, which include New York, Illinois and California, said federal agencies have taken on a nationwide 'slash-and-burn campaign' to unlawfully revoke previously awarded funds through a subclause in federal regulations. States' attorneys general allege a clause permitting federal agencies to terminate grants 'pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Federal award, including, to the extent authorized by law, if an award no longer effectuates the program goals or agency priorities' is being misused by the Trump administration. The states said congressionally mandated funds cannot be 'stripped away' to punish jurisdictions that enforce policies disliked by the current administration. States with sanctuary cities, research projects related to environmental protection standards and other measures have lost federal dollars in recent months. 'With the stroke of a pen, federal agencies have deprived States of critical funding they rely on to combat violent crime and protect public safety, equip law enforcement, educate students, safeguard public health, protect clean drinking water, conduct life-saving medical and scientific research, address food insecurity experienced by students in school, ensure access to unemployment benefits for workers who lose their jobs, and much more,' plaintiffs wrote in the lawsuit. 'Federal agencies have done all of this without any advance notice, without any explanation to the State recipients, and in direct contravention of the will of Congress,' they added. 'The State recipients' sole offense has been that they used the grant funding precisely how they had promised in the grant applications—and as they were instructed by the agencies at the time of the grant award.' 'Leftist AGs and governors who would rather spend their days drafting toothless letters in an attempt to 'stick it to Trump' continue to miss the mark while failing to address real issues impacting their states,' White House principal deputy press secretary Harrison Fields told The Hill. 'Every one of these elected officials should focus on serving their constituents, not their party bosses, and work with the President and this administration to enact the agenda the American people overwhelmingly supported.' The lawsuit follows a federal judge's Thursday ruling rejecting the Department of Transportation's attempts to tie state funding to immigration enforcement operations.

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