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Dems not budging on government shutdown demands ahead of high-stakes Trump meeting, Jeffries suggests

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House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., has signaled that Democrats are not budging on their key demands ahead of a high-stakes meeting with President Donald Trump about government funding.
The federal government will enter a partial shutdown at midnight on Wednesday if Republicans and Democrats do not reach a deal on funding priorities for fiscal year (FY) 2026, which ends at the end of the day on Sept. 30.
All but one House Democrat rejected Republicans’ plan for a roughly straightforward extension of FY 2025 funding levels, through Nov. 21, aimed at giving appropriators more time for a longer-term deal.
Jeffries blasted the measure — called a continuing resolution (CR) — as partisan and has demanded that Republicans make concessions on healthcare in exchange for Democratic support.
SPEAKER JOHNSON FLIPS SCRIPT ON DEM LEADERS WITH STAUNCH WARNING AGAINST GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, left, is signaling that Democrats are holding firm on their healthcare demands ahead of a high-stakes meeting with President Donald Trump on government funding. (Getty Images)
He signaled during a last-minute news conference on Monday that Democrats would reject anything less than a written plan to extend Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies enacted during the COVID-19 pandemic.
«No one can trust their word on healthcare. Are you kidding me? These people have been trying to repeal and displace people off the Affordable Care Act since 2010. That’s 15 years,» Jeffries said. «And on behalf of the American people, we’re supposed to simply take their word that they’re willing to negotiate? The American people know that would be an unreasonable thing for us to do.»
Jeffries also pointed out that an alternate CR offered by Democrats would expand those subsidies under the ACA, colloquially known as «Obamacare,» permanently.
SHUTDOWN EXPLAINED: WHO WORKS, WHO DOESN’T AND HOW MUCH IT COSTS

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., speaks during a news conference at the Capitol, in Washington on March 6, 2025. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)
It comes hours before he, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., are set to meet with Trump to discuss government funding at 3 p.m. on Monday.
Johnson and Thune, along with other Republicans in Congress, have been pushing Democrats to accept the deal on the table — pointing out that funding levels have remained roughly the same since former President Joe Biden’s time in office.
«We are ready, we are willing, we are able to find a bipartisan path forward and reach a spending agreement that actually keeps the government open, but meets the needs of the American people in terms of their health, their safety, and their economic well-being related to lowering the high cost of living, as opposed to allowing tens of millions of Americans to experience dramatically increased health care costs,» Jeffries told reporters.
«What we will not do is support a partisan Republican spending bill that continues to gut the healthcare of the American people.»
The COVID-era Obamacare subsidies are due to expire at the end of this year without any action by Congress.
Thune told NBC News’ «Meet the Press» on Sunday that he would be open to negotiating a deal but not paired with the current government funding talks.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks with reporters near his office on Capitol Hill on Sept. 18, 2025, in Washington. (Mariam Zuhaib/AP Photo)
«We can have that conversation, but before we do, release the hostage. Set the American people free, keep the government open, and then let’s have a conversation about those premium tax credits. I’m certainly open to that. I think we all are,» he said.
«I will say … that particular program is desperately in need of reform. It’s fraught with waste, fraud and abuse. So we are going to have reforms if we take action there, but I think there’s potentially a path forward.»
The GOP-led CR passed the House earlier this month largely along party lines.
It’s now on the Senate, where at least several Democrats will be needed to reach the 60-vote threshold to proceed with the bill.
Schumer is under tremendous pressure by his left flank after playing a key role in advancing Republicans’ earlier CR in March, which extended through Sept. 30.
This time, however, Jeffries assured that he and Schumer are in «lock-step» on bucking the Republican plan unless a compromise is reached.

Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries speak at a press conference at the U.S. Capitol on June 11, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)
He said of their upcoming sit-down with Trump, «We’re heading into the meeting to have a good faith negotiation about landing the plane in a way that avoids a government shutdown but does not continue the Republican assault on the healthcare of the American people.»
«Republicans control the House and the Senate, and there’s a Republican president. If the government shuts down, it’s because Republicans want to shut the government down,» Jeffries said at another point.
Johnson, meanwhile, hammered Democrats’ position in an appearance on «Sunday Morning Futures.»
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«We passed a continuing resolution, a simple, very clean, 24-page continuing resolution to keep the government open for seven more weeks, so the appropriators can finish that process,» Johnson said.
«And [Schumer] said, ‘No. Instead, I want to add $1.5 trillion in new spending to a seven-week stopgap bill…we want to reinstate free healthcare to illegal aliens paid for by U.S. taxpayer dollars. We want to claw back the $50 billion that we passed, Republicans passed, in our big, beautiful bill, the Working Families Tax Cuts, to provide for rural hospitals and healthcare, and a laundry list of other partisan priorities. He knows it’s a nonstarter.»
politics,donald trump,house of representatives politics,democrats,government shutdown
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Israel receives 2 more hostage coffins from Gaza through Red Cross operation as identification begins

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Israel on Tuesday received the coffins of two hostages returned from Gaza through the Red Cross, and officials said the remains will be identified before being released to their families as the military vowed to keep working to bring home all remaining captives.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the coffins were handed over to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Shin Bet force inside Gaza. From there, they will be transferred to Israel, where they will be received in a military ceremony with the chief military rabbi.
Once received, the coffins will be placed in the custody of the National Center of Forensic Medicine of the Ministry of Health, where they will be identified. The families will receive formal notification once the process is complete.
The prime minister’s office said all families of the deceased hostages have been updated and sympathy has been expressed for their loss.
ISRAEL NAMES TWO OF FOUR DEAD HOSTAGES RETURNED BY HAMAS, HOW THEY DIED
People walk past posters of hostages held by the Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza at Hostage Square in Tel Aviv Oct. 10, 2025. (Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)
«The effort to return our hostages continues ceaselessly and will not stop until the very last hostage is returned,» Netanyahu’s office said.
The news comes the same day remains of a hostage returned from Gaza were identified as Sgt. Maj. Tal Haimi, commander of Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak’s rapid response team.
REMAINS OF LAST FEMALE HAMAS HOSTAGE AND IDF SOLDIER HANDED OVER TO ISRAEL

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as President Donald Trump prepares to deliver remarks to the Knesset Oct. 13, 2025 in Jerusalem. (Kenny Holston/Pool/Getty Images)
Haimi was 41 when he died, and, according to the IDF, he was killed in combat while defending Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak during the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre. His remains were taken to Gaza, where they were held for more than two years.
Haimi’s family initially believed he was taken alive, and Israel declared him deceased Dec. 13, 2023.
REMAINS OF LAST FEMALE HAMAS HOSTAGE AND IDF SOLDIER HANDED OVER TO ISRAEL

The Israeli army held a military protocol for deceased hostage Tal Haimi. (IDF Spokesperson’s Unit)
Following the identification of Haimi’s remains, Netanyahu’s office expressed condolences to his family and reiterated its call for Hamas to release the remains of all deceased hostages for proper burial.
The IDF echoed the call, demanding Hamas fulfill its obligations under the agreement brokered by the Trump administration.
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On Oct. 13, 2025, the final 20 living hostages returned to Israel after more than two years in captivity. Since then, the remains of 28 deceased hostages have gradually been returned, while 13 others — including U.S. citizens Itay Chen and Omer Neutra and soldier Hadar Goldin, whose body has been held since 2014 — remain in Gaza.
Fox News Digital’s Rachel Wolf contributed to this report.
israel,terrorism,armed forces,benjamin netanyahu
INTERNACIONAL
Undercover video reveals red state university employee suggesting DEI is simply being rebranded

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FIRST ON FOX: A conservative watchdog group has released a video that it says raises concerns that administrators at the University of Utah are continuing to push diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), possibly at odds with a relatively new state anti-DEI law.
«No, no comment,» University of Utah education coordinator Lucas Alvarez told Accuracy in Media when asked about an allegation he was pushing DEI in violation of a 2024 law aimed at curbing DEI practices inside state universities.
Accuracy in Media President Adam Guillette then showed Alvarez video of him explaining the current DEI practices at the university.
«We’re still, I think, figuring out as we go, like, HB261,» Alvarez said in the video. «It’s complicated, I mean, like, the programs that we’re doing, I think technically we’re still allowed to do them, but they have to be marketed in a certain way.»
BOMBSHELL REPORT EXPOSES ‘DEEPLY CONCERNING’ MIDWEST UNIVERSITY INITIATIVE PUSHING FAR-LEFT K-12 LESSON PLANS
A conservative watchdog group has released a video suggesting DEI is being rebranded at University of Utah. (Accuracy in Media)
When pressed by Guillette on what he meant by changing «marketing,» Alvarez once again said no comment.
Alvarez was also pressed about another comment he made on video suggesting DEI was still a focus at the university, explaining that his department has been «meeting with a lot of campus partners» to do the «strategic work» of being in «compliance» but pointing out that these partners have «academic freedom.»
«I think what he was referring to was the professors have academic freedom to do research and speak from their expertise in the field that they’ve studied,» LeiLoni McLaughlin, the university’s director of the Center for Community & Cultural Engagement, told Guillette when asked what Alvarez meant.
UNIVERSITY DOCTOR RESIGNS AFTER UNEARTHED AUDIO EXPOSES HIM BOASTING ABOUT SKIRTING ANTI-DEI LAWS

The University of Utah campus is viewed from Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Utah. (Rick Bowmer/AP Photo)
«He kind of suggested that they shifted things over to the professors though,» Guillette said, prompting McLaughlin to explain she thinks that was a «false statement.»
McLaughlin was then asked by Guillette what Alvarez meant by changing the «marketing.»
«I think with the legislative changes, every university has had to shift,» McLaughlin said.
«Shift their actions or just shift how they market what they are doing,» Guillette responded.
«Both,» McLaughlin answered.
WATCH: DEI STILL IN PLACE AS COLLEGE ‘FINDING WAYS’ AROUND BAN, OFFICIAL ADMITS: ‘PROUD OF THE FIGHT’

People march outside the office of hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman, protesting his campaign against diversity, equity, and inclusion and attacks against former Harvard University President Claudine Gay in New York City, Jan. 4, 2024. (Shannon Stapleton/Reuters)
A University of Utah spokesperson told Fox News Digital in a statement, «I reject the assertion that the university is hiding diversity work with rebranding and remarketing.»
«The changes required under HB 261 transformed how we support student success, recruit faculty, celebrate events and create a sense of belonging on our campus.»
The spokesperson added that Alvarez is «not a spokesperson for the University of Utah.»
«His comments do not reflect the position of the institution,» the spokesperson continued. «The comments of LeiLoni McLaughlin, director of our Center for Cultural and Community Engagement…were much more aligned with university leaders.»
The spokesperson also pointed to an interview that she said showed the Black Student Union was «extensively mourning the loss of their center and identity-based resources» due to the school following the new law.
The school has previously outlined measures taken to conform with the law, including closing identity-based resource centers, transferring DEI employees to other jobs on campus, and prohibiting diversity statements in hiring.
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«This isn’t about one or two bad apples — it’s about a broken system,» Guillette told Fox News Digital about his video footage, filmed in October 2024 and May of this year.
«Utah needs a Kansas-style DEI ban with a reporting mechanism and actual legal consequences. And more importantly, America’s university system needs to be fundamentally reshaped with a focus on education rather than activism.»
Republicans across the country, along with President Donald Trump’s administration, have scored major victories pushing back on DEI in favor of meritocracy standards, but experts have warned that universities and organizations will be hostile toward the idea of giving up those methods and will instead attempt to rebrand them under different banners.
«At first, they just pushed back on, tried to defend DEI itself, but when that became so obvious that what DEI really was anti-White, anti-Asian, sometimes anti-Jewish discrimination in hiring and promotion, they abandoned that,» Consumers’ Research Executive Director Will Hild told Fox News Digital earlier this year. «Now what they’re trying to do is simply change the terminology that has become so toxic to their brand. So we’re seeing a lot of companies move from having departments of DEI, for example, to ‘departments of belonging’ or ‘departments of inclusivity.’»
Hid added, «It is the exact same toxic nonsense under a new wrapper, and they’re just hoping to extend the grift, because a lot of these people — I would say most of the people — working in DEI are useless.»
politics,campus radicals,utah,education
INTERNACIONAL
Censura para Celia Cruz en Cuba: un grupo de artistas denunció que no pudieron homenajearla en el centenario de su nacimiento

Celia Cruz, la reina de la salsa, cumpliría este martes 100 años. Sin embargo, entre el silencio oficial y denuncias de censura, el centenario de la artista cubana más universal pasó desapercibido en Cuba.
Según denunciaron artistas y promotores culturales, hubo esfuerzos de las autoridades por dejar sin efecto cualquier atisbo de homenaje.
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La Iglesia católica fue la única que realizó una actividad para recordar a Cruz, la cantante que inmortalizó éxitos globales como ‘“Bemba colorá”, “La vida es un carnaval” y “La negra tiene tumbao”.
Celia Cruz dejó la isla tras el triunfo de la revolución y jamás pudo regresar al país.
Misa en honor a Celia Cruz en La Habana
Este martes se ofició, a propuesta de un grupo de artistas, una misa en memoria de la popular artista cubana en la iglesia Nuestra Señora de La Caridad del Cobre en el popular municipio de Centro Habana.
Celia Cruz, cuyo segundo nombre era, precisamente, Caridad, era muy devota de esta virgen, Patrona de Cuba. Celia Cruz participando de los Latin Grammy de 2002 (Foto: AP/Kim D. Johnson).
“Hay un deseo de agradecimiento por su legado cultural (…) y lo que ella significó como embajadora de la cultura cubana para el mundo entero”, señaló Ariel Suárez, párroco de la iglesia y secretario adjunto de la Conferencia de Obispos Católicos de Cuba. El religioso aseguró que no recibió ninguna presión oficial relacionada con esta eucaristía.
A un costado del altar destacó una imagen de Celia Cruz y en primera fila se ubicó un puñado de artistas cubanos. Entre ellos, el multinstrumentista y ganador de un Grammy Latino Alain Pérez.
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“Es lastimoso (la censura). Y personalmente creo que cometen un error las instituciones a estas alturas del mundo de tratar de cegar y limitar el significado de Celia. No puedo decir mucho más porque no es un misterio y no es nada que no sepamos los que estamos claros de esta situación”, afirmó Pérez.
Cancelan en La Habana un acto de homenaje a Celia Cruz
Recientemente, la Fábrica de Arte Cubano, una de las principales instituciones culturales privadas del país, canceló a última hora un espectáculo programado para el pasado domingo en honor a la ‘Guarachera de Cuba’ y lamentó que el acto no pudiera celebrarse.
El centro cultural colocó una butaca vacía en el lugar en el que debió realizarse el homenaje y la acompañó con una hora de silencio. En redes sociales se publicó una foto de un sillón con la leyenda “arte de la resistencia”.
La cubana Rosa Marquetti, autora del libro “Celia en el mundo”, afirmó que se trata de “un capítulo más a la historia de la censura y la aplicación de métodos de comisariado político dentro de la cultura cubana”.
Por qué Celia Cruz es silenciada por el gobierno cubano
Desde su exilio a Estados Unidos en 1960, un año después del triunfo de la revolución cubana, las autoridades isleñas y la artista mantuvieron una constante tensión, al punto en el que la cantante nunca pudo volver a su país.
Ya en territorio norteamericano, Cruz logró una fama internacional que la encumbró -para muchos- como la cubana más reconocida mundialmente en el último siglo.
La artista murió en 2003 sin haber regresado a su patria, aunque en 1990 se presentó en la Base Naval estadounidense de Guantánamo, un territorio bajo control estadounidense que La Habana reclamó históricamente. Celia Cruz quedó inmortalizada como la «reina de la salsa» (Foto: AP).
Pese a la censura, su música puede incluso sonar ahora en los hoteles cubanos -pertenecientes al conglomerado empresarial GAESA, de las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias- sobre todo por las constantes peticiones de los turistas.
También es admirada por numerosos cubanos de la isla. Incluso, Laura de la Uz, una de las actrices más renombradas del país, la homenajeó a principios de los 2000 en una popular obra de teatro titulada “Delirio Habanero”, donde interpretó a tres personajes icónicos cubanos, Celia Cruz, el músico Benny Moré y un legendario barman apodado Varilla. La obra estuvo en cartelera en La Habana.
(Con información de EFE y AP)
cuba, Celia Cruz
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