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Republican who voted against Donald Trump's bill won't run again

Republican who voted against Donald Trump's bill won't run again

©Associated Press
Republican senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina said yesterday he will not seek re-election next year, an abrupt announcement that came one day after he staked out his opposition to president Donald Trump's tax breaks and spending cuts package because of its reductions to health care programmes.
His decision creates a political opportunity for Democrats seeking to bolster their numbers in the 2026 midterm elections, creating a wide-open Senate race in a state that has long been a contested battleground.
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Ukrainian drone hits industrial plant deep in Russian territory
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Ukrainian drone hits industrial plant deep in Russian territory

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Austerity budgets are a gift to populists
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Irish Examiner

time5 hours ago

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Austerity budgets are a gift to populists

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As director of President Barack Obama's National Economic Council, Summers successfully pushed the same approach. Following a decade of economic stagnation, President Joe Biden's administration broke from this pattern and tried to rouse the American economy from its pandemic-induced torpor with a massive fiscal stimulus. Summers led a media offensive against the policy, warning of an inflationary surge. But Biden stuck to his guns, and, although inflation did jump up briefly, no catastrophe unfolded, thanks to the United States' unique ability to run large budget deficits, owing to the dollar's centrality in the global financial system. Time and again over the past half-century, America has been able to sustain higher levels of debt than many anticipated. 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But the fact so many prominent Republicans are objecting to Trump's spending bill reflects the hollow ideological core Maga shares with other right-wing populist movements. A motley collection of intense grievances does not easily translate into a coherent economic strategy. Instead, the Democratic Party should focus on building a progressive economic policy platform that can mobilise electoral support. Bidenomics was a good but imperfect start, not a mistake to be regretted. The Democrats — and democrats worldwide — must offer a more appealing vision of the expansive use of the public purse. Otherwise, they may not get their hands back on the levers of fiscal policy for some time to come. Martijn Konings is professor of Political Economy and Social Theory at the University of Sydney and the author, most recently, of 'The Bailout State: Why Governments Rescue Banks, Not People' (Polity, 2025). Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2025.

Harris to tell forum that 10% US tariffs are 'new normal'
Harris to tell forum that 10% US tariffs are 'new normal'

RTÉ News​

time6 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Harris to tell forum that 10% US tariffs are 'new normal'

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