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Fox News Politics Newsletter: Government crawls into crisis as shutdown continues

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Welcome to the Fox News Politics newsletter, your source for the latest updates on the Trump administration, Capitol Hill and more Fox News politics content. Here’s what’s happening …
–Supreme Court to decide if faith-based counseling on gender identity is protected speech
-Dem senator’s hefty donation to disgraced AG candidate’s campaign comes back to haunt him
-Who is the Trump-appointed judge blocking deployment of the National Guard to Portland?
D.C. Gridlock
The Senate remains deadlocked on a path to end the shutdown as it nears its second week, and Republicans’ meager support across the aisle to reopen the government may be crumbling.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., needs at least eight Senate Democratic caucus members to join Republicans to reopen the government, given that Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., has consistently voted against the GOP’s bill.
So far, a trio of Democratic caucus members, Sens. John Fetterman, D-Pa., Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., and Angus King, I-Maine, have crossed the aisle to reopen the government … Read more
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Oct. 3, 2025. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
White House
FEDERAL OVERRIDE: Trump says he’d consider invoking the Insurrection Act as courts, governors seek to block his crime crackdown
‘SUBSTANTIAL’: Trump says ‘substantial’ number of jobs will be permanently lost if shutdown persists. Dems ‘have no leader’
COVER-UP EXPOSED: Biden blocked dissemination of intel showing Ukrainian officials’ concerns about his family’s ‘corrupt’ business ties
PRESIDENT’S PICK: Trump looms large over special congressional election Republican primary in deep red district

U.S. President Donald Trump talks to the media after walking off Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House on Oct. 5, 2025, in Washington, DC (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
CLASH OF POWERS: White House slams ‘egregious’ court order blocking troop deployments amid Portland unrest
World Stage
BREAKTHROUGH: Trump, Brazil’s Lula move to mend fences after trade clash, judicial firestorm with ‘friendly’ call
TALKS END: Trump ends Venezuela talks, military options loom, new report
NEW DESTINATION: Cuban-led caravan aims for Mexico City as Trump policies deter migrants from US
Capitol Hill
WAR ON DRUGS: War on cartels? The White House says it has an iron-clad case to strike narco-terrorist groups
‘ACCOUNTABILITY’: FBI fires agents, dismantles corruption squad after probe unveils monitoring of GOP senators, Patel says

Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Kash Patel testifies before the House Judiciary Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on Sept. 17, 2025 in Washington, D.C. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
CAMPAIGN FALLOUT: Kaine defends Jay Jones amid AG candidate’s texts envisioning murder of top Republican: ‘Still a supporter’
‘ABUSE OF POWER’: Hawley rips Jack Smith’s ‘Biden’s Stasi’ probe, calls alleged spying ‘abuse of power beyond Watergate’
NOTHING TO HIDE: House committee withdraws James Comey subpoena for Jeffrey Epstein testimony
‘NOT NORMAL’: Dem shellacked by McConnell in 2020 mounts new Senate bid: ‘cowards in Washington are bowing to Donald Trump’
DEMS DIG IN: Schumer’s shutdown holds as Senate Dems block GOP bid to reopen government

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., right, update reporters following their face-to-face meeting with President Donald Trump and Republican leaders on the looming government funding crisis, at the Capitol in Washington, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Across America
CASE IN LIMBO: Georgia prosecutors request 90-day extension to replace Willis in Trump election case
‘IT’S MY JOB’: Bondi clashes with Durbin on National Guard deployment: ‘Love Chicago as much as you hate President Trump’
CLAIM VS. REALITY: DHS takes on Pritzker’s ‘Smorgasbord of Lies,’ releases list debunking his claims
DEATH WISH: Jay Jones said if more police were killed it would reduce shootings of civilians, according to Virginia lawmaker

Jay Jones, who is running to become Virginia’s attorney general in 2025, has come under fire for a series of text messages calling for the death of political opponents and remarks about police officers. (Maxine Wallace/The Washington Post/Getty Images)
ROOMMATES RISING: The only two Dems running for governor this year are former roommates with mirroring political careers
PHOTO FINISH: Cuomo slams Mamdani for photo with anti-LGBTQ Uganda official: ‘If he’s smiling, he’s lying’
TAMPERING DETECTED: Maine investigates claim that 250 unmarked ballots found in Amazon box
COURT FIGHT AHEAD: New Jersey Dem hopeful vows to sue Trump over troop deployments, says states would pay the price
LONE STAR RISING: Abbott Deploys ‘Elite Texas National Guard’ After Trump Call for Reinforcements: «Ever Ready»
COMMON GROUND: New MAHA initiative around biomedical research is uniting the GOP with some unusual bed fellows
DEFYING FEDERAL LAW: Federal agent says Chicago’s ‘ICE-free zones’ endanger operations, embolden protesters

Demonstrators march through downtown protesting the agenda of the Trump Administration on Sept. 30, 2025, in Chicago. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
‘ROCK BOTTOM’: Ex-Chicago police officer rips city’s stand-down order for swarmed ICE agents: ‘Most disgusting act’
Get the latest updates on the Trump administration and Congress, exclusive interviews and more on FoxNews.com.
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New Navy Under Secretary Cao to ‘supercharge’ force by ditching DEI, raising standards, modernizing IT

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Navy Secretary John C. Phelan has tapped new Navy Under Secretary Hung Cao to lead a sweeping overhaul of the service and «supercharge the Navy and Marine Corps,» including modernizing its business and IT systems.
Cao, sworn in Oct. 3. by Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, returns to the Department of the Navy with direct orders to «cut red tape and raise standards.»
Phelan said in a memo shared exclusively to Fox News Digital that the reforms are to «sharpen readiness, fix faster, and put sailors, Marines, and their families first» as well as restore the Navy and Marine Corps’ warrior ethos.
Cao, a former U.S. Navy captain, is also a well-known Republican figure, who ran for the U.S. Senate in Virginia in 2024 and in 2025, was nominated by Trump and confirmed as the 35th Navy under secretary.
HEGSETH ORDERS ABOUT FACE ON PENTAGON’S SLIPPING GROOMING STANDARDS
President Donald Trump with Hung Cao in 2024. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
The move follows remarks by Hegseth Sept. 30 to flag and general officers at Marine Corps Base Quantico.
«First and foremost, we must restore a ruthless, dispassionate and common-sense application of standards,» Hesgeth said. «Standards must be uniform, gender-neutral, and high. If not, they’re not standards — they’re suggestions. Suggestions that get our sons and daughters killed.»
Cao’s reforms will start at home and include launching a new inspection system with 60-day repair timelines to overhaul military family housing.
Base dining will shift to healthier, locally sourced menus designed to mirror combat readiness and improve nutrition.
HEGSETH VOWS TO REBUILD MILITARY DETERRENCE SO ENEMIES ‘DON’T WANT TO F— WITH US’

Secretary of the Navy John Phelan greets sailors during a visit. (Courtesy of the Secretary of the Navy)
Outdated IT and business systems will be replaced with modern, mobile-ready platforms to streamline daily operations and empower sailors with tools that work for the first time.
Beyond quality-of-life upgrades, the Navy is targeting full audit compliance by FY2026 to strengthen transparency and accountability.
Recruiting reforms will eliminate DEI-based waivers in favor of merit-only accessions, while reserve forces will integrate more closely with active-duty training pipelines.
Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders will move faster, and new policies will expand school choice for military families.
On Guam, infrastructure upgrades, from runways to fuel and housing capacity will harden the island’s role as a vital Indo-Pacific power-projection hub.
AIR FORCE TIGHTENS RULES ON TRANSGENDER AIRMEN; SUPPORTERS SAY IT PRIORITIZES READINESS: REPORT

Navy Under Secretary Hung Cao has been tapped to lead a sweeping overhaul of the Navy and Marine Corps. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
«These aren’t talking points, they’re timelines,» Cao said of the reforms. «We’re ending bureaucratic drift and restoring excellence.»
Cao’s initiatives will also aim to unify family welfare and combat readiness under what Phelan describes as «one quarterback, one playbook.»
On Capitol Hill, Rep. Jack Whitfield, R-Texas, chair of the House Armed Services readiness panel, said Congress would «support the Navy’s renewed focus on lethality and accountability.»
HEGSETH TELLS TROOPS TO RESIGN IF THEY OPPOSE HIS PLAN TO SCRAP ‘WOKE’ POLICIES AND RESTORE WARRIOR ETHOS

Department of War Secretary Pete Hegseth arrives at the Pentagon. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)
A Democratic staffer on the Senate Armed Services Committee called it «an overdue reset» and confirmed oversight «will track results closely.»
The sweeping, new portfolio integrates quality-of-service improvements, modernization, and reserve reform under a single chain of command.
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«This is about speed, standards, and service,» Phelan said. «When the basics work the first time, ships sail more, aircraft fly farther, and the world’s greatest maritime force only gets stronger.»
Hegseth and Phelan did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.
us navy,navy,defense,pete hegseth,politics
INTERNACIONAL
Roma, atascos y caos: el insólito tráfico de la antigüedad y por qué recuerda a las ciudades modernas

En la Roma antigua, los problemas de tráfico y la búsqueda de estacionamientos ya formaban parte de la vida cotidiana, lejos de la imagen de calzadas amplias y tránsito fluido. La capital del Imperio romano y otras ciudades, como Ostia y Pompeya, experimentaban una congestión que condicionaba la rutina de sus habitantes, según documenta Muy Interesante.
La presión sobre las infraestructuras viales, la saturación de las calles y la falta de espacios para estacionar generaban tensiones que recuerdan a los desafíos urbanos actuales.
El crecimiento demográfico de Roma, impulsado por su papel como metrópoli del Mediterráneo, atrajo a cientos de miles de personas dentro de sus murallas. Esta concentración provocó una demanda constante sobre las calzadas, que, aunque sólidas, no estaban preparadas para soportar el tráfico simultáneo de carros de transporte, vehículos privados y multitudes de peatones.
Las calles del centro, muchas veces estrechas, se convertían en auténticos cuellos de botella. En Pompeya y Ostia, los restos arqueológicos muestran profundas rodadas en la piedra, evidencia del paso incesante de vehículos pesados.
Estas marcas no solo atestiguan la intensidad del tráfico, sino que también reflejan el deterioro de las infraestructuras, lo que obligaba a reparaciones frecuentes y a la imposición de restricciones en ciertos tramos, como señala Muy Interesante.

Uno de los principales factores de la congestión era el movimiento constante de carros de transporte, esenciales para el aprovisionamiento de mercancías en la ciudad. El flujo de estos vehículos, especialmente durante el día, colapsaba las vías principales.
Para aliviar la situación, las autoridades imperiales dictaron normas que prohibían la circulación diurna de carros, obligando a los transportistas a operar durante la noche. Esta medida generó nuevas molestias: el estruendo de las ruedas metálicas y el tránsito de animales de tiro alteraban el descanso nocturno.
Autores clásicos como Juvenal y Marcial se quejaron del ruido que perturbaba la tranquilidad de los romanos, según recoge Muy Interesante. Así, la regulación del tráfico diurno trasladó el conflicto al horario nocturno, evidenciando la dificultad de equilibrar las necesidades económicas con la calidad de vida.
El estacionamiento representaba otro reto considerable. Sin espacios reservados, los romanos solían dejar sus carros cerca de foros, mercados o termas (baños públicos de la antigua Roma, espacios construidos para el baño y la recreación, que incluían piscinas y otras estancias), lo que generaba atascos adicionales y bloqueaba el paso de peatones.
Las inscripciones y textos legales de la época documentan quejas contra quienes ocupaban lugares indebidos. En Ostia, la acumulación de carros a la espera de descargar mercancías provocaba embotellamientos en torno a los almacenes.

En Pompeya, la presencia de postes de piedra delimitaba zonas para impedir el acceso de vehículos, reservando el espacio para peatones y actividades comerciales. La ausencia de una planificación de aparcamientos agravaba la tensión entre la circulación y la vida urbana cotidiana.
Frente a este panorama, las autoridades romanas intentaron imponer orden mediante regulaciones. Además de la prohibición diurna de circulación de carros, se establecieron restricciones de acceso a determinadas zonas, especialmente en torno al Foro Romano, donde se priorizaba el tránsito peatonal y la actividad política.
En algunas ciudades, se instalaron límites físicos como pivotes de piedra, escalones o estrechamientos intencionados de la calzada para disuadir el paso de vehículos. Estas medidas reflejan un esfuerzo consciente por gestionar la movilidad y reducir los conflictos, aunque, como muestran las fuentes literarias, rara vez lograban erradicar el problema debido a la persistente presión demográfica y económica.
La convivencia entre peatones y vehículos era fuente constante de fricciones. Los ciudadanos de a pie utilizaban aceras elevadas y pasos de piedra, como los que aún se conservan en Pompeya, pero el espacio seguía siendo insuficiente. Muchas veces, los peatones debían compartir la calzada con los carros, lo que incrementaba el riesgo de accidentes.
El filósofo Séneca criticó la incomodidad y el peligro de las calles abarrotadas, mientras que Juvenal ridiculizó la imposibilidad de moverse sin ser empujado o pisoteado. Estas quejas reflejan el malestar generalizado ante la congestión y el ruido, según destaca Muy Interesante.

Para adaptarse a esta realidad, los habitantes de Roma desarrollaron estrategias cotidianas. Algunos optaban por desplazarse a pie para evitar la lentitud de los carros, otros programaban sus viajes en horarios menos concurridos y los aristócratas recurrían a esclavos para abrirse paso en las calles más saturadas.
El ingenio y la flexibilidad se convirtieron en recursos esenciales para sobrevivir en la compleja jungla urbana romana. Incluso en ciudades más pequeñas como Pompeya, el trazado urbano revela intentos de controlar el flujo mediante calles de sentido único, zonas peatonales y sistemas de drenaje que influían en el ancho de la calzada. Estas soluciones locales demuestran que la gestión del tráfico era un desafío común en todo el Imperio.
Más allá de los aspectos prácticos, los problemas de tráfico y aparcamiento dejaron una huella cultural en la Roma antigua. El ruido de los carros se integró en el paisaje sonoro de la ciudad, y la congestión se convirtió en símbolo de los excesos urbanos, donde el lujo y el comercio coexistían con la incomodidad del hacinamiento.
El tráfico caótico llegó a ser una metáfora de la propia Roma: una ciudad poderosa y dinámica, pero también marcada por contradicciones y tensiones internas.
La experiencia cotidiana de los romanos muestra que los dilemas de movilidad y congestión urbana no son exclusivos de la modernidad, sino que han acompañado a las grandes ciudades desde hace milenios, como ha documentado Muy Interesante.
INTERNACIONAL
Netanyahu, on 2-year mark of Oct. 7 Hamas terror attack, says Israel ‘not broken,’ vows to bring hostages home

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu marked the second year since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attack in a statement shared on social media Tuesday, calling it «a fateful war for our existence» and declaring that Israel’s «enemies didn’t break us.»
«Infants, children and the elderly were murdered,» Netanyahu said in his remarks shared on X. He added that 251 men and women were taken into tunnels in the Gaza Strip, figures the IDF later released.
Netanyahu said that he and his wife, Sara, «bow our heads in memory of our martyrs and fallen,» while pledging that Israel «continues to work in every way to return all the abductees, both the living and the fallen.»
The Oct. 7 Hamas attack remains the deadliest single day for Jews since the Holocaust.
ISRAEL’S COVERT CAMPAIGN TARGETS HAMAS TERRORISTS BEHIND OCT 7 MASSACRE
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers remarks during a joint news conference at the White House, Sept. 29. (Alex Wong/Getty Images)
Terrorists stormed Israeli communities near the Gaza border and attacked the Nova music festival, killing families in their homes and kidnapping men, women and children. The Hamas assault ignited a war that remains ongoing.
Netanyahu described the ongoing conflict as «the War of Rebirth on Seven Fronts,» a fight he said was for Israel’s survival and future. «Our bloodthirsty enemies hit us hard, but they have not broken us,» he said. «Whoever raises his hand against us will suffer unprecedented crushing blows.»
He praised Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers and commanders for «waging a fierce war against those who seek our harm on every front» and asserted that Israel has «broken the Iranian axis,» while reshaping the region.
At the same time, he spoke of «immense pride in our country’s miraculous resilience» paired with the «immense pain» of loss.
TRUMP ANNOUNCES ISRAEL AGREES TO GAZA ‘INITIAL WITHDRAWAL LINE’ AS ‘3,000 YEAR CATASTROPHE’ NEARS END

Israeli soldiers watch the northern Gaza Strip from southern Israel, July 30. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)
«Our bloodthirsty enemies hit us hard, but they did not break us,» Netanyahu said.
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Netanyahu concluded his statement with a call for unity, vowing to pursue three central war aims: the return of all hostages, the elimination of Hamas’s control in Gaza and a permanent guarantee that the territory will never again threaten Israel.
«Together we will stand, and together, with God’s help, we will win,» he said.
Negotiators from Israel and Hamas have convened in Egypt this week to discuss details on President Donald Trump’s peace plan to end the war in Gaza and return 48 Israeli hostages.
Fox News Digital’s Caitlin McFall contributed to this report.
israel,conflicts,middle east,terrorism,benjamin netanyahu
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