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Dana Perino: Progressive Dems want to ‘light the party on fire'

Dana Perino: Progressive Dems want to ‘light the party on fire'

Fox News19 hours ago
Fox News host Dana Perino and the panel discuss former ABC News reporter and anchor Terry Moran admitting bias of network news, Democratic support of Zohran Mamdani and more on 'Gutfeld!'
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Texas Democrats evacuate amid bomb threat at Illinois hotel
Texas Democrats evacuate amid bomb threat at Illinois hotel

USA Today

time3 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Texas Democrats evacuate amid bomb threat at Illinois hotel

WASHINGTON — Some of the Texas Democrats who fled their state to try to block Republicans' redistricting efforts were evacuated from an Illinois hotel where they were staying over a bomb threat. Police said they responded to a 'report of a potential bomb threat at the Q-Center hotel and convention complex' at 7:15 a.m. central time in St. Charles, a suburb west of Chicago. They said they conducted a 'thorough search' along with the Kane County Sheriff's Office bomb squad and found 'no device.' 'In response to the threat, 400 people were immediately evacuated and the area was secured as bomb squad units conducted their investigation,' the St. Charles Police Department wrote. 'Following clearance from authorities, all guests and staff have safely returned to the premises.' Illinois Democratic Gov. JB Pritzker wrote on X that, 'Threats of violence will be investigated and those responsible will be held accountable.' Texas House Rep. John Bucy III, one of the Democrats at the hotel, told USA TODAY in an Aug. 6 interview that many legislators were still asleep when the alarm went off in the morning and that the group gathered outside. He said it took about two hours before everything was cleared up and they were allowed to safely reenter. "I want to say thank you to Gov. Pritzker. I want to say thank you to law enforcement and to the hotel staff," Bucy said. "They worked diligently to make sure that the place was safe... They are showing what real leadership looks like. It's sad to me that (Texas Gov.) Greg Abbott doesn't have the same qualities in him as a leader." More than 50 Texas Democrats left their state on Aug. 3 to deny Republicans the quorum they need to move ahead with their redistricting efforts. The effort could give Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives up to five more seats in the 2026 midterms. The Democratic state lawmakers dispersed to blue states, including Illinois, Massachusetts and New York. Abbott, a Republican, filed an emergency petition Aug. 5 seeking to remove the Texas state Democratic House leader from office. Contributing: Phillip Bailey, Savannah Kuchar, and Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY

Is the US headed toward a recession? Experts weigh in

time4 minutes ago

Is the US headed toward a recession? Experts weigh in

A weak jobs report in recent days raised alarm among some analysts that the U.S. economy may be slipping toward a recession. Hiring slowed sharply over the summer, federal government data showed. The jobs report came days after fresh gross domestic product data indicated average annualized growth of 1.2% over the first half of 2025, well below 2.8% growth last year. Analysts who spoke to ABC News said the economy could dip into a downturn but the outlook remains uncertain. They differed sharply on the likelihood of a recession, ranging from dire warnings to skepticism about whether the recent data suggests significant cause for concern. "It's too early to see whether this is a trend," Harry Holzer, a professor of economics at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Brookings Institution, told ABC News. "The likelihood of a recession went up because of these job numbers, but it could be a one-time adjustment or a bump down that avoids negative growth." The economy added an average of about 35,000 jobs over three months ending in July, which marks a major slowdown from roughly 128,000 jobs added monthly over the prior three months, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data on Friday showed. Employers are hiring at their slowest pace since 2020. Hours after the release of the report on Friday, President Donald Trump fired BLS Commissioner Erika McEntarfer, an appointee of former President Joe Biden who was confirmed by a bipartisan vote in the Senate in 2024. In a social media post, Trump volleyed sharp criticism and baseless accusations at McEntarfer, claiming without evidence that the data had been "manipulated." The jobs report featured revisions of previous months' data, which is a routine practice. McEntarfer did not immediately reply to ABC News' request for comment. "It has been the honor of my life to serve as Commissioner of BLS alongside the many dedicated civil servants tasked with measuring a vast and dynamic economy," McEntarfer said in a social media post after her dismissal. "It is vital and important work and I thank them for their service to this nation." William Beach, a former commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, who was appointed by Trump, condemned the firing of McEntarfer. "The totally groundless firing of Dr. Erika McEntarfer, my successor as Commissioner of Labor Statistics at BLS, sets a dangerous precedent and undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau,' Beach posted on X. Trump, meanwhile, touted his economic performance in a social media post: "The Economy is BOOMING under 'TRUMP' despite a Fed that also plays games, this time with Interest Rates." Some analysts disagreed. The hiring cooldown hit a wide swath of industries, including manufacturing and the federal government. The overall unemployment rate of 4.2% continued to hover near a historically low level, but unemployment rose among Black workers, which can foretell job losses among other groups. "The risks are increasingly high that we're going into recession," Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, told ABC News. "We're not there yet – and maybe this thing gets turned around. But that's increasingly becoming hard to do with each passing week." Zandi largely faulted the rollout of Trump's tariffs for the apparent cooldown. In recent months, Trump has imposed a slew of far-reaching levies on dozens of countries and some specific products, such as steel, aluminum and cars. Tariffs place a tax burden on importers, raising their costs and risking elevated prices for consumers, Zandi said. "Tariffs weigh on economic growth," Zandi added. The Trump administration has touted tariffs as part of a wider set of "America First economic policies," which have "sparked trillions of dollars in new investment in U.S. manufacturing, technology, and infrastructure," according to the White House's website. The economy would likely need to slow further to be considered a recession. Many observers define a recession through the shorthand metric of two consecutive quarters of decline in a nation's inflation-adjusted gross domestic product. The National Bureau of Economic Research, or NBER, a research organization seen as an authority on measuring economic performance, uses a more complicated definition that takes into account several indicators that must convey "a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months," the group says. While acknowledging the tepid numbers, other analysts said warnings about a recession are premature. The economy has largely averted the type of widespread job losses that often accompany a recession. Consumer spending, which accounts for about two-thirds of economic activity, ticked higher over three months ending in June. Corporate earnings have remained robust. The jobs report sent stocks tumbling but markets have since recovered. "It seems to me people are anchoring on the jobs report and using it to telegraph a recession. I'm not sure it does that," Mark Blyth, a professor of political economy at Brown University, told ABC News. "Nobody knows and everybody is doing wish fulfillment," Blyth added. "If you don't like the administration's policies, you're willing it to be a recession and if you like them, you're saying, 'no.'" To be sure, recession forecasts are hardly bulletproof. A surge of inflation in 2021 -- and an interest-rate hike soon afterward -- unleashed a flood of recession warnings, but no downturn came to pass. More recently, Wall Street banks predicted a possible recession after Trump's "Liberation Day" tariff announcement, before pulling back their assessments after Trump dialed back the levies. "Recessions tend to be unforecastable," Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors and a former Fed official, told ABC News. "Often there's an event that causes people to lose confidence, change behavior and start a downward spiral. Those events are very hard to predict." Still, Sahm added, the available data indicates a weakened economy. "A slow-growing economy is not a good economy," Sahm said. "We want to avoid a recession but avoiding a recession is a low bar. We want an economy that's better than that."

MAGA Antitrust Agenda Under Siege by Lobbyists Close to Trump
MAGA Antitrust Agenda Under Siege by Lobbyists Close to Trump

Wall Street Journal

time4 minutes ago

  • Wall Street Journal

MAGA Antitrust Agenda Under Siege by Lobbyists Close to Trump

The second Trump administration seemed poised to deliver on MAGA's embrace of aggressive antitrust enforcement. Instead, those efforts have run headlong into power brokers with close ties to President Trump who have snatched up lucrative assignments helping companies facing antitrust threats. The injection of politically-connected lobbyists and lawyers into antitrust investigations is a shift in an arena that for decades was a niche area dominated by specialized lawyers and economists.

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