
Dr Oz tells federal health workers AI could replace frontline doctors
Dr Mehmet Oz reportedly told federal staffers that artificial intelligence models may be better than frontline human physicians in his first all-staff meeting this week.
Oz told staffers that if a patient went to the doctor for a diabetes diagnosis it would cost roughly $100 an hour, compared with $2 an hour for an AI visit, according to unnamed sources who spoke to Wired magazine. He added that patients may prefer an AI avatar.
Oz also spent a portion of his first meeting with employees arguing they had a 'patriotic duty' to remain healthy, with the goal of decreasing costs to the health insurance system. He made a similar argument at his confirmation hearing.
'I think it is our patriotic duty to be healthy,' Oz said in response to a question from the Republican senator Todd Young of Indiana. 'First of all, it feels a heck of a lot better … But it also costs a lot of money to take care of sick people who are sick because of lifestyle choices.'
Oz was recently confirmed by the Senate to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) – one of the largest and thorniest of the federal government agencies. CMS oversees $1.5tn in annual spending, health insurance for nearly half of Americans and incredibly dense regulations that underpin much of America's health insurance system.
His confirmation came as the federal Department of Health and Human Services is slated to lose roughly a quarter of its workforce amid cuts by the HHS secretary, Robert F Kennedy Jr, and the billionaire Elon Musk's unofficial 'department of government efficiency' (Doge).
CMS has seen a relatively small portion of the cuts – 300 workers compared with a total loss of 20,000. However, Republicans are proposing huge cuts to Medicaid, the health insurance program for the low-income overseen by CMS, which insures roughly 71 million people. Republicans are seeking to cut the program to pay for tax cuts that overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy.
The 64-year-old was a surgeon before hosting The Dr Oz Show, a spinoff of Oprah Winfrey's talkshow. He hosted the program for more than a decade, and ended it to seek an open Senate seat in Pennsylvania. He lost to the Democrat John Fetterman in 2022.
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Oz has long been criticized for his endorsement of unproven cures – among them 'magic' weight loss supplements and his endorsement of hydroxychloroquine to treat Covid-19.
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NBC News
an hour ago
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House passes Republican-led bills to repeal D.C. laws on noncitizen voting and policing
WASHINGTON — The Republican-controlled House is poised to pass a trio of bills this week to repeal Washington, D.C., laws on immigration, voting and policing, even as it has yet to restore a painful a $1 billion cut to the city's budget. The House passed two of the bills on Tuesday. One would bar noncitizens from voting in local elections in the nation's capital, overturning a D.C. law that was passed in 2022. The other would restore collective bargaining rights and a statute of limitations for D.C. police officers involved in disciplinary cases. Then, on Thursday, the House is expected to pass a third bill, the District of Columbia Federal Immigration Compliance Act, which would require the D.C. government to comply with requests from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security to share information and detain undocumented immigrants. Under current D.C. law, local authorities do not work with federal immigration officials unless they have a judicial warrant. All together, the bills represent House Republicans' attempt to assert authority over deep-blue D.C. at a time when the GOP has unified control of the federal government. ' Home rule ' — where the D.C. mayor and city council make their own laws but Congress has the ability to review them — has long been a point of contention. Democrats have pushed in recent years to grant full statehood to D.C., while Republicans have slammed decisions made by local leaders and sought to reverse them. 'D.C.'s City Council made radical decisions in our nation's capital under the Biden-Harris administration, passing local laws that are woefully inconsistent with national standards or constitutional principles,' Rep. August Pfluger, R-Texas, the chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee who authored the GOP voting bill, said in a statement to NBC News. 'I'm proud that the House is taking action to overturn several of these reckless measures — including my legislation to prohibit noncitizens from voting in local D.C. elections,' he said. At the same time, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Republican leaders have been dragging their feet on a legislative fix for D.C.'s budget. A government funding bill that Congress passed in March to avert a shutdown included a provision requiring the city to revert back to fiscal year 2024 funding levels, leaving it with a $1.1 billion shortfall. The move was quickly met with opposition from local D.C. leaders. The Senate voted by unanimous consent in March to undo it and restore D.C.'s authority to use local tax dollars as its leaders see fit. President Donald Trump endorsed the fix, calling on the House to 'immediately' pass that bill in a social media post on March 28. But months later, Johnson still hasn't held a vote on the bill, prompting criticism from Democrats and D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser. 'It's absurd that the House hasn't taken it up. It's absolutely irresponsible, unfair and beneath the credibility of leadership,' said Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., who represents a congressional district just D.C. 'It's not our money, it's D.C.'s money ... and I don't know why the speaker hasn't put the Senate bill on the floor. It'll pass overwhelmingly.' 'This is a particular egregious example of substituting their judgment for those who are locally elected to govern the District of Columbia,' Hoyer said. Last month, Johnson told reporters he was in communication with Bowser and that the House would take up the funding fix 'as quickly as possible.' The speaker said that passing Trump's massive domestic policy package had taken up 'all of our energy' and insisted the delay was not for a 'political purpose.' 'We're working on it right now. It's not like we've closed the door to that,' House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., told NBC News on Tuesday. 'But obviously there are other problems we're trying to resolve along the way.' Bowser's office denounced the GOP bills to revoke DC law and — while noting that D.C. has mitigated the most 'catastrophic' impacts of the budget restrictions — urged Congress to pass the funding fix. 'Mayor Bowser continues to oppose all congressional interference in the lives and affairs of Washingtonians. DC will continue to fight to protect our home rule and self-determination,' a Bowser spokesperson said in an email. 'If Congress wants to be helpful, they should pass the District of Columbia Local Funds Act to fix their damage to DC's FY25 budget.' Johnson's office had no comment when asked Tuesday when — or whether — he still plans to hold a vote on the funding fix. Rep. Lisa McClain, R-Mich., the No. 4 in Republican leadership, said, 'I honestly don't know. I haven't heard yes or no,' when asked if the funding fix will come up for a vote. Other congressional Democrats said Republicans should stay out of D.C. issues. 'It's bad enough, usually, when they're playing in D.C. local, home rule issues,' said Rep. Glenn Ivey, D-Md., whose district abuts Washington. 'But then to do it at a time when they haven't returned the $1.1 billion is especially egregious.' Immigration has dominated the national political debate this week, with protests erupting in Los Angeles in response to the Trump administration's mass deportation efforts. Republicans said the fight over immigration is a winning issue for the party, and they've continued to lean into it with the legislation on the floor this week. 'If D.C. wants illegals to vote, we've made it clear at the federal level people here illegally should not vote in any elections,' Scalise said. 'We're still the most generous nation in the world in terms of our legal immigration system,' he continued, 'but we have to fix our broken immigration system. And you could just see what's going on in L.A. to prove the point.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
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Trump reveals identity of Joe Biden 'deep state' official he believes wielded the autopen to sign orders
Donald Trump has suggested which former 'deep state' official he believes may behind Joe Biden 's infamous autopen. Speaking to the press from the Oval Office on Tuesday, the Republican claimed that a former high-ranking Department of Justice official may have been part of the scandal. An autopen enables its operator to produce signatures, in this case Biden's, potentially giving whoever controlled it power over the president's official business. Trump has slammed the use of the autopen under Biden's administration and how the Democrat allegedly used it to sign pardons and executive orders. But Biden pushed back in a statement this month, denying anyone else made presidential decisions under his tenure and claiming he was in charge. 'I made the decisions about the pardons, executive orders, legislation, and proclamations,' his statement read. 'Any suggestion that I didn't is ridiculous and false.' Trump opened an investigation last week to determine 'who ran the United States while President Biden was in office' with a major focus on 'examining policy documents signed with an autopen, who authorized its use, and the validity of the resulting Presidential policy decisions.' Responding to a question about the LA riots on Tuesday, Trump pivoted and teed off on a rant about the autopen. 'You know, we're moving murderers out of our country that were put here by Biden or the autopen,' he told reporters. 'The autopen really did it,' 'The people, whether it's Lisa Monaco or whoever operated the autopen, these are criminals, people are criminals and allowed these criminals into our country,' Trump continued. Monaco was a longtime Barack Obama and Biden aide who held powerful roles for both administrations. From 2013-2017, Monaco was the Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Advisor to President Obama. She then left government before rejoining again to serve four years as Biden's deputy attorney general. While serving under Biden Monaco oversaw the Justice Department's massive effort to track down and charge those who participated in the January 6th Capitol protest. The investigation - one of the largest in DOJ history - yielded criminal charges against over 1,500 defendants. Reports indicate that Monaco was in frequent contact with the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office coordinating how the office would use a specific statute to charge defendants with obstruction of an official proceeding. Microsoft recently hired Monaco to serve as their head of global affairs where she will oversee cybersecurity policy and work with foreign governments. Monaco did not immediately respond to the Daily Mail's request for comment. Some online reacted to Trump's suggestion with outrage, saying the former Justice Department worker has ties to the 'deep state.' 'That's quite the deep state resume,' one X user wrote of her long government experience. Under Trump's order to probe the autopen, all of the pardons, clemency grants, executive orders, presidential memoranda, and other presidential policy decisions issued by Biden will be investigated. Actions under review would include Biden's pardons for son Hunter and Dr. Anthony Fauci and orders related to a variety of areas including education, immigration, health care, climate change and more. Trump has argued the use of the autopen invalidates Biden's orders. If his administration can get the courts to agree, it could undo thousands of actions taken by the former president.


The Independent
3 hours ago
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GOP senators break ranks on Trump's military parade - one compares it to North Korea
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