
‘How much does it cost for fascism?': Tensions erupt at Nebraska GOP congressman's town hall
It didn't take long for the audience gathered for the meeting at the University of Nebraska to erupt in chants of 'tax the rich,' while the Republican congressman attempted to defend his decision to vote for the the president's massive agenda.
'I truly believe that this bill will allow America to experience growth, that it will allow our communities to thrive, that it will spark our economy, that it will help farmers and ranchers, that it will take care of the vulnerable. And more than anything, I truly believe this bill protects Medicaid for the future,' Flood said, speaking over outbursts from the crowd.
Flood, one of few members of his party to hold in-person events during spring's congressional recess as the GOP looked to avoid blowback from the president's DOGE initiative, heeded the National Republican Congressional Committee's updated guidance to focus this August district work period on selling Trump's agenda.
'With the One Big Beautiful Bill signed into law just a few weeks ago, this is a critical opportunity to continue to define how this legislation will help every voter and push back on Democrat fearmongering,' the memo from the NRCC, the House GOP's campaign arm, stated.
But as he did earlier this year, Flood met a largely hostile crowd. The congressman was pressed on everything from the president's sweeping tax and spending cuts legislation to veterans' issues, Medicaid funding and the war in Gaza during a wide-ranging question-and-answer period – all against a backdrop of near-constant heckling, chants and booing from the audience.
Still, the he maintained his position on the president's domestic agenda package. 'Is every bill perfect? No, but I supported this bill,' he told the crowd.
In one tense back-and-forth in Nebraska, an audience member confronted Flood about government spending and authoritarianism.
'My question is fiscal,' the attendee began, referencing reports that the makeshift immigration detention facility in Florida dubbed 'Alligator Alcatraz' is expected to cost $450 million to operate for a single year.
'How much does it cost for fascism? How much do the taxpayers have to pay for a fascist country?' the attendee asked, as the crowd erupted in applause.
Flood responded, 'Americans went to the polls in November, and they had a choice between a Democratic candidate that had an open border, no enforcement, fentanyl, drugs, human trafficking, and they had a choice between that and a candidate that said close the border, get illegal immigrants out of our country, stop the fentanyl, stop the human trafficking, stop the drugs, stop the crime, stop the violence. That's what Americans voted for.'
'Americans voted for a border that is secure, and I support the president enforcing our immigration laws, which, by the way, were written by Congress.'
The audience appeared to grow increasingly agitated, with continued shouts hurled at the congressman.
Another member from the audience accused Flood of staying silent in the face of what they called a 'fascist machine,' referring to the conservative blueprint Project 2025. 'You said in Seward that you were not a fascist,' the person said. 'But your complicity says otherwise.'
'Fascists don't hold town halls with open question-and-answer series,' he responded. The audience again booed.
Despite his efforts to present the recently passed budget bill – which one constituent called 'the big, ugly bill' – as a solution for Medicaid funding and rural hospitals, audience members attacked Flood over cuts to SNAP benefits, veterans' programs and health care access.
Veterans in the audience criticized him for backing a law they said threatens benefits for those who served. 'How can you stand a bill that erodes the very services that people like me, my family, and younger vets rely on?' one Marine Corps veteran asked.
Flood said he had personally met with the VA secretary and promised improvements to the system but offered no specifics.
The Nebraska lawmaker also fielded a question on the Jeffrey Epstein files – a topic that has consumed Capitol Hill in recent weeks but yielded limited exchanges so far in the early public town halls during lawmakers' break from Washington.
Read aloud by an aide at the event, the written question posed: 'Why are you covering up the Epstein files?' It was met with raucous applause from the audience.
Flood responded: 'Let's be very clear – at the next pro forma session of the Congress, you will find my name as a sponsor on a resolution from the House Rules Committee to release the Epstein files to protect the victims and not re-victimize them again.'
He added that he supports Congress' subpoena of Epstein's former associate Ghislaine Maxwell for a deposition, and declard: 'I am for the release of those records.'
The topic also arose at a Democrat's town hall Monday night in Benton Harbor, Michigan, where Democratic Sen. Elissa Slotkin made a case against presidential pardon power.
Asked by an audience member if she thinks the presidential pardon power should be limited, Slotkin called it 'a quirk of history that does not make sense in America for either party, for any reason.'
'To me, it is just a strange thing that the president of the United States has a few extra chits in their pocket to give away,' she continued, adding that she doesn't think people who are wrongly imprisoned should be in jail.
As pressure grows on the Trump administration to release more information related to the Epstein case, the president hasn't ruled out a pardon for Maxwell, who met recently with a top Justice Department official and also was transferred to a lower security prison camp from where she was previously being held.
Asked last week if clemency was on the table in exchange for Maxwell's testimony, Trump said, 'I'm allowed to do it, but nobody's asked me to do it. I know nothing about it. I don't know anything about the case, but I know I have the right to do it.'
Slotkin expressed wariness that Trump is talking about pardon for Maxwell 'in year one of his presidency, not the end of his presidency, which is what you typically see.'
'Look, I thought it was controversial with President Biden, too. It was controversial with everyone that Obama or Clinton or Bush did. So to me, it's just this weird kind of literally get out of jail free card that I just think muddies the waters,' she said.
'When you have a president who has a deep, deep problem with corruption, it just can be taken to such a dangerous degree that he's letting out pedophiles and criminals, violent people because he's paying back favors to others. I just can't support that,' she continued.
The Michigan senator, who delivered what she called her 'economic war plan for America' and argued against the massive domestic policy bill that Trump signed into law July 4, addressed another issue that looms large for lawmakers when they return to DC in a matter of weeks: government funding.
As Democrats weigh how to approach negotiations with Republicans to keep the government funded past the September 30 deadline, Slotkin, who did not vote for the GOP-led bill to avert a shutdown earlier this year, said she would not be open to any proposal without a commitment by Republicans to restore some of the health care-related funding they have voted to slash.
'For me, for my vote, for my willingness to join in that negotiation, you're going to have to restore something of Americans' health care in order to get me back on that team,' she said.
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Superintendent Tracy Chapman, commander of the Lake Macquarie Police District, said both girls were from China, having travelled to Australia as part of a program where they stayed with local residents who acted as hosts. They were attending a local school and visiting locations around the Hunter area. 'They arrived in Australia eight days ago and were expected to depart Australia on the 16th of August,' Supt Chapman said. 'NSW Police continue to work with the program facilitators to ensure that all of the appropriate processes and notifications are being undertaken.' The two young girls were staying with the same hosts, a man and a woman. They had their own bedrooms. 'All parties had retired to their rooms for the evening when one of the hosts heard a commotion of some sort, and when she went to investigate, she located the 14-year-old.' - NewsWire A 13-year-old Chinese exchange student has been charged with murder over the alleged stabbing death of a 14-year-old girl at a home in Newcastle. The 14-year-old, also an exchange student from China, was found with a single wound to her torso at Euston Close, Edgeworth, about 10.20pm on Monday, after police were called to reports of a stabbing. She was treated by paramedics at the scene before being rushed to hospital in a critical condition. The younger girl will appear in a Children's court on Wednesday on the murder charge. Superintendent Tracy Chapman, commander of the Lake Macquarie Police District, said both girls were from China, having travelled to Australia as part of a program where they stayed with local residents who acted as hosts. They were attending a local school and visiting locations around the Hunter area. 'They arrived in Australia eight days ago and were expected to depart Australia on the 16th of August,' Supt Chapman said. 'NSW Police continue to work with the program facilitators to ensure that all of the appropriate processes and notifications are being undertaken.' The two young girls were staying with the same hosts, a man and a woman. They had their own bedrooms. 'All parties had retired to their rooms for the evening when one of the hosts heard a commotion of some sort, and when she went to investigate, she located the 14-year-old.' - NewsWire Aussie music icon dies Australian music legend Col Joye has died aged 89. Colin Frederick Jacobsen AM - better known as Col Joye - was most famous for his role as the frontman of Col Joye and the Joy Boys, and for his 'discovery' of iconic Australian band the Bee Gees. He was the first Aussie pop star to hit number 1 on local charts with the single 'Bye Bye Baby' in 1959, which he performed with backing vocals from The Sapphires, the first all-female, all-First Nations singing group in Australian history. Joye would go on to rack up another three top 10 hits with the Joy Boys throughout the early 1960s, and went on to open ATA Studios at Glebe in inner Sydney. In 1963, Joye happened across a group of young performers from Redcliffe calling themselves the Bee Gees, who at the time were touring Queensland resorts to make ends meet. - NewsWire Australian music legend Col Joye has died aged 89. Colin Frederick Jacobsen AM - better known as Col Joye - was most famous for his role as the frontman of Col Joye and the Joy Boys, and for his 'discovery' of iconic Australian band the Bee Gees. He was the first Aussie pop star to hit number 1 on local charts with the single 'Bye Bye Baby' in 1959, which he performed with backing vocals from The Sapphires, the first all-female, all-First Nations singing group in Australian history. Joye would go on to rack up another three top 10 hits with the Joy Boys throughout the early 1960s, and went on to open ATA Studios at Glebe in inner Sydney. In 1963, Joye happened across a group of young performers from Redcliffe calling themselves the Bee Gees, who at the time were touring Queensland resorts to make ends meet. - NewsWire Kmart accused of misleading over slave labour supplies Retail giant Kmart is facing accusations it misled customers on its ethical credentials by sourcing clothing supplies from factories in China with links to slave labour. An Australian-based Uyghur group has filed a lawsuit against the outlet in the Federal Court, seeking to gain documents so they can see whether it knowingly sourced stock from suppliers who used forced labour from those in the ethnic group. In its ethical sourcing statement, Kmart said it aimed to provide products that respected human rights according to its ethical sourcing code which committed to abiding by international standards, including guidelines set out in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The lawsuit filed by the Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association claims Kmart included on its 2024 and 2025 factory lists two suppliers with links to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. It said this region in China's west has been well-documented for "systemic state-sponsored forced labour and other atrocities against Uyghur and other Turkic Muslim people". The group wants proof from Kmart that it has abided by its ethical sourcing promises regarding these suppliers and whether its public statements have been misleading or deceptive. Kmart must ensure it is not profiting off forced labour in China, association president Ramila Chanisheff said. "We're demanding answers from Kmart so we know whether its actions live up to its words about addressing forced labour risks in its supply chain," she said. Read more here. Retail giant Kmart is facing accusations it misled customers on its ethical credentials by sourcing clothing supplies from factories in China with links to slave labour. An Australian-based Uyghur group has filed a lawsuit against the outlet in the Federal Court, seeking to gain documents so they can see whether it knowingly sourced stock from suppliers who used forced labour from those in the ethnic group. In its ethical sourcing statement, Kmart said it aimed to provide products that respected human rights according to its ethical sourcing code which committed to abiding by international standards, including guidelines set out in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The lawsuit filed by the Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association claims Kmart included on its 2024 and 2025 factory lists two suppliers with links to the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. It said this region in China's west has been well-documented for "systemic state-sponsored forced labour and other atrocities against Uyghur and other Turkic Muslim people". The group wants proof from Kmart that it has abided by its ethical sourcing promises regarding these suppliers and whether its public statements have been misleading or deceptive. Kmart must ensure it is not profiting off forced labour in China, association president Ramila Chanisheff said. "We're demanding answers from Kmart so we know whether its actions live up to its words about addressing forced labour risks in its supply chain," she said. Read more here. Man who won Oz Lotto jackpot 'always thought' he'd win after playing for decades Plenty of us dream of winning the lottery, but do we actually harbour genuine hope it'll happen? Well this winner did and he's now $15 million richer. The Victorian is one of two winners to share Oz Lotto's $30 million jackpot last night and he told lottery officials he's been playing the game for decades knowing that one day a big win would come. 'Honestly, I always thought I was going to win. Ever since I was in my 20s, I've thought, 'one day I'm going to win'. It's just taken a while!" he told The Lott. 'I'll help the kids and grandkids – help them to pay off their homes. 'A new car and caravan are what I want so we can do a few trips, maybe eventually do a lap around Australia.' While he says he always knew he'd win, he didn't have chosen numbers and won with a QuickPick entry. Plenty of us dream of winning the lottery, but do we actually harbour genuine hope it'll happen? Well this winner did and he's now $15 million richer. The Victorian is one of two winners to share Oz Lotto's $30 million jackpot last night and he told lottery officials he's been playing the game for decades knowing that one day a big win would come. 'Honestly, I always thought I was going to win. Ever since I was in my 20s, I've thought, 'one day I'm going to win'. It's just taken a while!" he told The Lott. 'I'll help the kids and grandkids – help them to pay off their homes. 'A new car and caravan are what I want so we can do a few trips, maybe eventually do a lap around Australia.' While he says he always knew he'd win, he didn't have chosen numbers and won with a QuickPick entry.