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Republican fundraising outpaces Democrats by nearly double, June numbers show

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As the Democratic Party continues to reel from its 2024 losses and deals with internal strife, Republican fundraising nearly doubled that of the Democrats in June, according to reporting by The Hill and a Fox News Digital review.

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The Hill reported that the Republican National Committee raised a grand total of $16.2 million in the month of June, far outstripping the Democratic National Committee’s $8.6 million during the same period.

The RNC currently has a war chest totaling $80.78 million, while the DNC has $15.22 million on hand, according to the outlet.

This comes as the Democratic Party had to deal with internal turmoil in June, including drama over former vice-chair David Hogg, a progressive activist, who decided to not seek reelection just months after being elevated to the role. Hogg had sparked considerable internal rifts with his push to primary older incumbent Democrats.

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ONE YEAR AFTER BIDEN’S UNPRECEDENTED EXIT FROM 2024 RACE, DEMOCRATS POLL NUMBERS AT ROCK BOTTOM

President Trump and House Republicans are leading a fundraising surge, while Democrats’ fundraising has not been helped amid the party’s internal divisions. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo; J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo; J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo; David Dee Delgado/Getty Images)

At the time, DNC vice-chair Malcolm Kenyatta told Fox News Digital the process was «frustrating» and felt like a «slap in the face.»

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«We haven’t been able to be singularly focused,» Kenyatta said. «We’ve spent a lot of time talking about procedural nonsense within the DNC. I promise you nobody cares about that, and nobody wants to talk about it as little as I do. I want us to get refocused.»

This comes after Vice President Kamala Harris spent a whopping $1.5 billion during her 15-week campaign that ended in defeat to President Donald Trump, including burning through millions of dollars on star-studded events on the eve of the election, according to a report.

Despite this seemingly dire situation, Democratic Party leadership is taking an optimistic tone, saying in a Monday statement that this June was the «best-ever» for grassroots donations in an off-year in the committee’s history.

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DEMOCRATIC PARTY CATAPULTED INTO ‘NEW PHASE OF A COLD WAR’ IN ONE-YEAR WAKE OF BIDEN’S UNPRECEDENTED DROPOUT

Kamala Harris closeup shot

2024 Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris burned through $1.5 billion during her failed presidential bid, including millions spent on high-profile events just before her loss to Trump. (Peter Zay/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The statement said the party has raised a total of over $50 million since the start of the year.

DNC Chair Ken Martin commented that «around the country, people are energized, ready to fight back, and empowering Democrats to win elections.»

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«The DNC is breaking grassroots fundraising records, bringing on more volunteers than ever, and raising record-setting funds to beat Republicans,» said Martin. «Democrats are back in the ring thanks to grassroots energy across all 50 states, and together, we’re going to defeat the toxic Republican agenda and put this country back on track for hard-working families.»

Meanwhile, The Hill also reported the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) outraised its counterpart, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, $32.3 million to $29.1 million in the second quarter of the year and $18.1 million to $12.7 million in June.

The outlet noted that despite the fundraising, the DCCC reported having $39.7 million on hand, while the NRCC has $37.6 million. However, this is the first time in four years that the NRCC outraised the DCCC in the first six months of an election cycle.

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WATCH: NANCY PELOSI SILENT ON WHY BIDEN DID NOT RELEASE EPSTEIN FILES

House Republicans at press conference

GOP House leaders are touting a financial edge, with Republican congressional campaigns outraising Democrats in key battlegrounds. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

A Fox News Digital review of NRCC fundraising numbers found that on average, Republican congressional candidates in swing districts outraised vulnerable House Democrats in the second quarter $1.1 million to $661,000 and have more money on hand by over $848,000.

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In a statement emailed to Fox News Digital, NRCC Spokesman Mike Marinella said the committee was building a «historic» war chest.

«While House Republicans build a historic war chest to grow the majority, House Democrats are broke, divided, and hijacked by socialists,» said Marinella. «Donors are slamming the brakes because they know this party is pathetic, aimless, and has no chance of taking back the majority.» 

Fox News Digital reached out to the RNC, DNC and DCCC for comment but did not immediately receive a response. 

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Fox News Digital’s Deirdre Heavey, Paul Steinhauser and Stephen Sorace contributed to this report.

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Hunter Biden says father was on Ambien before disastrous debate, defends painting sales

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Former first son Hunter Biden disclosed his father was on an anti-insomnia prescription ahead of his disastrous 2024 debate that may have affected his command of the stage that evening.

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Biden said former President Joe Biden had taken Ambien, a gamma-aminobutyric acid enhancer similar to benzodiazepines, to help him sleep better amid his grueling schedule and advanced age.

He criticized several members of former President Barack Obama’s inner circle for continually doubting his father, saying that the 2024 State of the Union was a make-or-break moment that the elder Biden «knock[ed] out of the park.»

The debate, he said, was the next test his father was given by Democratic elders to see if he should run for reelection.

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HUNTER BIDEN RAGES AGAINST F—ING THUG TRUMP, INVOKES KKK IN IMMIGRATION RANT

Joe Biden, left, Hunter Biden, right (Getty)

«I know exactly what happened in that debate. He flew around the world, basically, the mileage that he could have flown around the world, three times. He’s 81 years old. He’s tired as s—. They give him Ambien to be able to sleep,» he said.

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«He gets up on the stage. And he looks like he’s a deer in the headlights. And it feeds into every f—ing story that anybody wants to tell,» Hunter went on, adding that CNN anchor Jake Tapper’s book relied on several anonymous sources for his related expose because in reality no one had spoken out against Joe.

«If this was a conspiracy… somehow the entirety of a White House in which you’re literally living on top of each other has kept their mouth shut about you now, like what? And what’s the conspiracy? Did Joe Biden get old? Yeah, he got old. He got old before our eyes. The people that came out against him were who — nobody — except Speaker Emerita Pelosi did not give a full-throated endorsement, which allowed everybody else to kind of go, ‘OK.’

«Who came out full-throated? Progressives. AOC, Bernie, the entire progressive wing, [Silicon Valley Congressman] Ro Khanna. The entirety of the progressive side of the Democratic Party said Joe Biden has got more of our agenda accomplished in four years than any president in history. The largest investment into climate change in history, just that alone. And so he gets over the hump. He goes and does Stephanopoulos, and everybody said that’s not enough…»

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Earlier in the interview, with Delaware Valley podcaster Andrew Callaghan, Hunter savaged Obama’s inner circle, mocking the hosts of «Pod Save America» — made up of his then-youthful close aides — as «Saviors of the Democratic Party.»

DNC VICE CHAIR COMPARES TRUMP TO NOTORIOUS SEGREGATIONISTS DURING HEATED TOWN HALL EVENT WITH BETO O’ROURKE

«[They’re] White millionaires that are dining out on their association with Barack Obama from 16 years ago living in Beverly f—ing Hills telling the rest of the world what Black voters in South Carolina really want or what the waitress living outside of Green Bay, Wisconsin [want].

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«I hear Rahm Emanuel’s going to run for president,» he added incredulously. «I think David Axelrod is going to run his campaign for him… there’s a f—ing answer; geniuses all.»

Hunter also disputed claims his father had been the unanimous choice of Democrats in 2020.

«Bull—-. We lost Iowa. We lost New Hampshire. We came in second in Nevada. David Plouffe and David Axelrod went on TV. They said that there’s no way Joe Biden can get the nomination, not a chance in the world. Mike Bloomberg’s gonna crush him in California. Elizabeth Warren’s gonna beat him in Massachusetts… A lot of rural voters said, ‘F— you, we love Joe.’ A lot urban voters said, ‘F— you. We love Joe.’ And they voted for him overwhelmingly,» he said.

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He later defended himself against allegations about his decision to market paintings, saying they were a pastime that «saved him» from his vices.

«They accused me of crimes for painting. Not that I couldn’t sell my paintings, but that it was a clear conspiracy to launder money and to curry influence by selling acrylic on canvas — through this abstract painting by Hunter Biden,» he said.

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«All of a sudden, the Iranians are going to change their nuclear weapons program. It’s such f—ing insane bull—-. Meanwhile, these mother f—ers are selling gold telephones and sneakers and $2 billion investments in golf courses and selling tickets to the White House for investment into their memecoin.

«If you believe the worst possible thing that they’ve ever said about me [in terms of influence peddling] — what they are openly doing, they’re openly doing. And nobody’s batting an eye. Don Jr. is opening a club called the Executive Club in Georgetown in which it is promised that you will be able to rub shoulders at the cost of a $500,000 initiation fee with… people and decisionmakers in the cabinet of his father.»

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House for comment, as well as a representative for former President Joe Biden in regard to the Ambien revelation.

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«Derrúmbela», le dijeron, pero él siguió construyendo

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La estructura se tambalea sobre campos de hierba que llegan hasta las rodillas, con el aspecto de una mezcla entre una tienda de campaña y un pastel de bodas gigante. Once pisos de habitaciones de madera roja oscura, que disminuyen de tamaño a medida que ascienden, se balancean unas sobre otras, aparentemente unidas únicamente por la maraña de cables que se extiende desde la cima hasta el suelo.

El interior no se siente menos precario. Los techos están apuntalados por postes de electricidad reutilizados. Regletas y cables cuelgan de vigas bajas. Baldes gigantes de agua de lluvia ayudan a soportar el peso de la estructura. Las escaleras caseras que conectan los pisos tienen ángulos pronunciados, a menudo sin pasamanos laterales.

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Chen Tianming, diseñador, constructor y residente de la torre de 43 años, no las necesita de todos modos. Subió con cuidado por las escaleras, pasando el rincón de lectura del quinto piso y el salón de té al aire libre del sexto.

Desde el noveno piso, observó a lo lejos los robustos y estandarizados edificios de apartamentos donde viven sus vecinos.

Chen Tianming y su destartalada casa de varios pisos en Xingyi, China. (Andrea Verdelli/The New York Times)

“Dicen que la casa está en ruinas, que el viento podría derribarla en cualquier momento”, comentó, una observación que no me pareció del todo descabellada cuando lo visité el mes pasado.

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“Pero la ventaja es que es llamativa, un poco llamativa. La gente la admira”, añadió. “Otros gastan millones y nadie va a ver sus casas”.

La casa de Chen es tan inusual que ha atraído a curiosos e incluso turistas a su rincón rural de la provincia de Guizhou, en el suroeste de China. Evoca un dibujo del Dr. Seuss o la Madriguera de “Harry Potter”. Muchas personas en las redes sociales chinas la han comparado con “El castillo ambulante”.

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Para el observador casual, la casa puede ser un mero espectáculo, una rareza frankensteiniana.

Para Chen, es un monumento a su determinación de vivir donde y como quiere, desafiando al gobierno local, a los vecinos chismosos e incluso, aparentemente, al sentido común.

Comenzó a reformar la casa familiar en 2018, cuando las autoridades de la ciudad de Xingyi ordenaron la demolición de su pueblo para construir un complejo turístico. Los padres de Chen, agricultores que construyeron la casa en la década de 1980, consideraron que la compensación que ofrecían los funcionarios era demasiado baja y se negaron a irse.

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La madre de Chen Tianming ve la televisión en el primer piso de su casa en Xingyi. Foto: Andrea Verdelli/The New York TimesLa madre de Chen Tianming ve la televisión en el primer piso de su casa en Xingyi. Foto: Andrea Verdelli/The New York Times

Cuando las excavadoras empezaron a arrasar sus granados, Chen se apresuró a regresar a casa desde Hangzhou, la ciudad oriental donde trabajaba como mensajero.

Junto con su hermano, Chen Tianliang, comenzó a construir una tercera planta. Al principio, la motivación fue en parte práctica: la compensación se determinaba por metros cuadrados, y si la casa tenía más plantas, tendrían derecho a más dinero.

Visitaron un mercado de materiales de construcción de segunda mano y compraron viejos postes de electricidad y tableros compuestos rojos (más baratos que los negros) y los ensamblaron con martillos, tornillos y muescas para formar tablas de suelo, paredes y columnas de soporte.

Entonces, Chen, quien desde hacía tiempo tenía un interés amateur por la arquitectura, se preguntó cómo sería añadir un cuarto piso. Su hermano y sus padres pensaron que no era necesario, así que Chen lo hizo solo. Luego, se planteó la posibilidad de un quinto. Y un sexto.

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«De repente, quise desafiarme a mí mismo», dijo. «Y cada vez que completaba mi pequeña tarea o sueño, sentía que tenía sentido».

También lo alimentaba el resentimiento hacia el gobierno, que no dejaba de enviarle órdenes de demolición y funcionarios para presionar a su familia. Para entonces, su casa era prácticamente la única que quedaba en los alrededores; sus vecinos se habían mudado a los nuevos edificios de apartamentos a unos 5 kilómetros de distancia. (Las autoridades locales han afirmado a los medios chinos que la construcción es ilegal).

Las expropiaciones masivas de tierras, a veces por la fuerza, han sido un fenómeno generalizado en China durante décadas en medio del impulso de modernización del país. Las casas de quienes logran resistir a veces se llaman «casas clavo», por cómo sobresalen como clavos después de que se ha desalojado el área circundante.

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Aun así, pocos destacan tanto como el de Chen.

Chen, quien había estudiado matemáticas y abandonó la universidad porque consideraba que la educación superior no tenía sentido, pasó años yendo y viniendo de una ciudad a otra, trabajando como vendedor de caligrafía, agente de seguros y mensajero. Pero anhelaba un estilo de vida más rural, comentó. Cuando regresó al pueblo en 2018 para ayudar a sus padres a defenderse de los promotores inmobiliarios, decidió quedarse.

Un mercado de productos agrícolas entre los rascacielos residenciales a los que se mudaron los vecinos de Chen. Foto: Andrea Verdelli/The New York TimesUn mercado de productos agrícolas entre los rascacielos residenciales a los que se mudaron los vecinos de Chen. Foto: Andrea Verdelli/The New York Times

«No quiero que mi casa se convierta en una ciudad. Me siento como el guardián del pueblo«, dijo mientras comía fideos con verduras de la huerta que su madre había salteado en su tradicional horno de ladrillo.

En los últimos años, la amenaza de demolición se ha vuelto menos inmediata. Chen presentó una demanda contra el gobierno local y los promotores, que aún está pendiente. En cualquier caso, el proyecto turístico propuesto se estancó después de que el gobierno local se quedara sin fondos. (Guizhou, una de las provincias más pobres y endeudadas de China, está plagada de proyectos turísticos extravagantes e inacabados).

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Pero Chen ha seguido construyendo. La casa es ahora una muestra en constante evolución de sus intereses y aficiones.

c.2025 The New York Times Company

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Federal judge blocks Trump administration from defunding some Planned Parenthood facilities

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A judge on Monday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from stripping some Medicaid funds from Planned Parenthood after Congress and President Donald Trump agreed to partially defund the nonprofit through passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

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Judge Indira Talwani of the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts said in her order partially granting a preliminary injunction that the bill unconstitutionally punishes Planned Parenthood member organizations that do not provide abortions. 

The injunction will risk «at most minimal harm—financial or otherwise» to the Trump administration while the lawsuit proceeds, Talwani, an Obama appointee, wrote.

The judge’s order appears to apply to some but not all Planned Parenthood facilities. The nonprofit said in a statement that it viewed Talwani’s order as a partial win and remained «hopeful» that the judge would take further judicial action down the line.

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«This isn’t over,» the organization said. «While we’re grateful that the court recognized the harm caused by this law, we’re disappointed that not all members were granted the necessary relief today.»

SENATE PARLIAMENTARIAN OKS BAN ON PLANNED PARENTHOOD FEDERAL FUNDING IN TRUMP MEGABILL

Pro-life demonstrators gather in front of the Supreme Court building as the Court hears oral arguments over Medina vs Planned Parenthood in Washington D.C. (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

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Talwani’s order arose from a lawsuit brought by Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, over the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, a massive budget bill that passed Congress this month with no Democrat support. Trump signed the bill into law on July 4.

A provision in the bill stripped Medicaid funding from Planned Parenthood, which the nonprofit said could force it to close about 200 of its 600 facilities and deprive about half of its customers, more than one million people, of services that do not include abortion.

Planned Parenthood attorneys noted in court filings that Medicaid typically does not cover abortion.

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JUDGE TORCHED FOR PLANNED PARENTHOOD ORDER: HER COURT LOOKS ‘LIKE A FAST FOOD DRIVE-THRU’

Planned Parenthood sign

A Planned Parenthood sign (ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

The attorneys argued that the bill would cause cancer and sexually transmitted infections to go undetected, especially for low-income people, and that more unplanned pregnancies would occur because of a lack of contraception access. They said the consequences of losing Medicaid funding «will be grave.»

Department of Justice (DOJ) attorneys had previously argued in court filings that the purpose of the budget provision was to stop «federal subsidies for Big Abortion» by freezing federal funds for certain Medicaid recipients who provide abortions. Weakening Planned Parenthood has been one of the pro-life movement’s leading priorities since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

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Talwani granted a temporary restraining order two weeks ago in favor of Planned Parenthood. The judge initially offered no explanation for her decision, a move that led to widespread backlash among Republicans who described it as judicial overreach. Days later, Talwani offered more context in a subsequent order.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD USING ‘LOOPHOLE’ TO GET MINORS GENDER TRANSITIONS WITHOUT PARENTS’ OK: WATCHDOG

March for Life in 2023

Anti-abortion activists march across the National Mall near the U.S. Capitol during the 50th annual March for Life rally on January 20, 2023 in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The preliminary injunction will partially leave in place the pause on defunding Planned Parenthood indefinitely, but the Trump administration is likely to appeal the order to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.

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The judge noted that her injunction applied to Planned Parenthood entities that do not provide abortion services or receive less than $800,000 in annual Medicaid reimbursements.

DOJ attorneys had previously argued to the court that blocking a measure that was passed by Congress and signed by the president was an extraordinary move and unjustified.

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«Beyond the futility of the claims on the merits, Planned Parenthood fails to demonstrate imminent irreparable harm to justify an injunction, asserting only classically reparable economic injury and irrelevant potential harm to patients, who are third parties not before this Court,» DOJ attorneys wrote.

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