Dozens of Democratic lawmakers have left Texas in an attempt to block the adoption of redrawn U.S. House maps sought by President Donald Trump.
Republican Gov. Greg Abbott says he will begin trying to remove the absent lawmakers from office if they do not return. The Texas House was unable Monday to vote on the maps after it fell short of the required quorum due to the Democratsâ absence.
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The Republican-dominated House also quickly issued civil arrest warrants for absent members and Abbott ordered state troopers to help find and arrest them, but Democrats who are not in Texas are beyond the jurisdiction of state authorities.
The revolt by the Texas Democrats â many of whom fled to Illinois or New York on Sunday â and Abbottâs threat ratcheted up a widening fight over congressional maps. The conflict has expanded to include Democratic governors who are floating the possibility of redrawing their own stateâs maps in retaliation. Their options are limited.
Here's the latest:
California Democrats consider new congressional maps to slash 5 GOP US House seats
A draft plan thatâs circulating aims to boost the Democratic margin to 48 of Californiaâs 52 congressional seats, according to a source familiar with the plan who was not authorized to discuss it publicly. It would need approval from lawmakers and voters, who may be skeptical to give it after handing redistricting power to an independent commission years ago.
In addition, the proposal would generously pad Democratic margins in districts for competitive seats.
The move comes in direct response to efforts by Texas Republicans to redraw House districts in order to strengthen the GOP hold on the chamber in 2026.
âś Read more about the proposed new California political maps
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â By Michael R. Blood
How reliable is the jobs data? Economists and Wall Street still trust it
The monthly jobs report is already closely-watched on Wall Street and in Washington but has taken on a new importance after Trump on Friday fired the official who oversees it.
Trump claimed that Juneâs employment figures were âRIGGEDâ to make him and other Republicans âlook bad,â yet he provided no evidence.
The firing followed Fridayâs jobs report that showed hiring was weak in July and had come to nearly a standstill in May and June, right after Trump rolled out sweeping tariffs.
Most economists say that the Bureau of Labor Statistics is a nonpolitical agency staffed by people obsessed with getting the numbers right. The only political appointee is the commissioner, who doesnât see the data until itâs finalized, two days before it is issued to the public.
âś Read more about the figures Trump is attacking
Company advised by Trump sons said it hoped to benefit from federal money, then took it back
A public document filed by a company that just hired Trumpâs two oldest sons as advisers included a sentence early Monday that said it hoped to benefit from grants and other incentives from the federal government â which their father happens to lead.
But when The Associated Press asked the Trump family business about the apparent conflict of interest, the document was revised and the line taken out.
Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. are getting âfounder sharesâ worth millions of dollars in New America Acquisition 1 Corp., according to the filing. Lawyers who prepared the filing said the earlier inclusion of the line was a âmistakeâ by a copyist.
âś Read more about the document and the company that hired Trumpâs sons
Abbott orders Texas Rangers to go after Democratic lawmakers
The Texas governor says heâs directed the Texas Rangers to investigate the Democratic state lawmakers whoâve left the state to deny the GOP-run Legislature a quorum.
Abbott asserts without presenting evidence that Democrats âmay have violatedâ state bribery laws. He suggests Democrats accepted money as part of their plans to leave Texas and avoid a legislative special session.
David Froomkin, a University of Houston law professor, says the governor, not any absent lawmaker, is on shaky legal ground. Froomkin says itâs difficult to prove any explicit quid pro quo even when an elected official collects campaign contributions connected to their duties.
Modi and Trump once called each other good friends. Now the US-India relationship is getting bumpy
The men shared bear hugs, showered praise on each other and made appearances side by side at stadium rallies â a big optics boost for two populist leaders with ideological similarities.
In India, the bonhomie between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. President Donald Trump was seen as a relationship like no other.
But with Trumpâs tariffs, Indiaâs purchase of oil from Russia and a U.S. tilt towards Pakistan, friction between New Delhi and Washington has been hard to miss. And much of it has happened far from the corridors of power and, unsurprisingly, through Trumpâs posts on social media.
The dip in rapport, some policy experts say, puts a strategic bilateral relationship built over decades at risk.
âś Read more about the rocky relationship between Trump and Modi
Judge orders Florida and federal officials to produce âAlligator Alcatrazâ agreements
The federal judge ordered Monday that officials must show which government agency or private contractor has legal authority to detain people or perform immigration officer roles at the hastily constructed immigration detention facility in the Everglades.
The order was part of an ongoing civil rights lawsuit against the state and federal governments by immigration attorneys who say âAlligator Alcatrazâ detaineesâ constitutional rights are being violated since they are barred from meeting lawyers, are being held without any charges, and a federal immigration court has canceled bond hearings.
Who has authority over the detention center has been a murky issue since it opened at the beginning of July.
âś Read more about the ruling on âAlligator Alcatrazâ agreements
California governor says he wants voters to consider a new congressional map in November
Gov. Gavin Newsom wants to advance partisan redistricting in response to Texas Republicansâ move. He says he wonât move ahead if Texas pauses its efforts.
Newsom says heâd call a special election for the first week of November. Voters would weigh a new congressional map drawn by the Democratic-controlled Legislature.
âCalifornia will not sit by idly and watch this democracy waste away,â Newsom said Monday.
Newsom said heâs not advocating for a specific number of seats redrawn to benefit Democrats. The party holds 43 of the stateâs 52 congressional seats.
State lawmakers are on recess until mid-August.
Californiaâs lawsuits against Trump administration help state keep $168 billion in federal money
Thatâs nearly a third of the stateâs budget. The state has filed 37 lawsuits since January, Attorney General Rob Bonta said Monday. Other Democratic-led states have joined most of the suits.
Bonta says the $168 billion in savings came from a single lawsuit filed in January against a Trump administration directive to cut $3 trillion. California also fought to keep $7 billion in grants to maintain roads, more than $930 million for schools and roughly $972 million in public health funding.
The state Legislature earlier this year voted to give Bontaâs office $25 million to fight new federal policies. The office has used $5 million so far to pay for in-house attorneys preparing the cases.
Texas House issues civil arrest warrants for absent members
Abbott has ordered state troopers to help find and arrest them, but Democrats who are not in Texas are beyond the jurisdiction of state authorities.
âIf you continue to go down this road, there will be consequences,â House Speaker Rep. Dustin Burrows said from the chamber floor, later telling reporters that includes fines.
The Republican response is accelerated compared with in 2021, when weeks passed before the GOP majority opted to issue civil arrest warrants for many of the same Texas House Democrats who left the state to protest new voting restrictions.
Lawmakers call on White House to release funds for AmeriCorps programs
AmeriCorps promotes national service such as tutoring children or helping communities respond to natural disasters.
Five Republican and three Democratic senators are urging the White House to release this yearâs funding for the program.
The senators say Congress provided nearly $1.3 billion for AmeriCorps this year. But they understand the White House Office of Management and Budget did not intend to release details of the remaining funding for numerous grantees this budget year.
For example, they say, contracts have expired for more than 130 programs that connect Americans 55 years and older to help children with their academic and social development, and no timeline has been provided for release of the funds appropriated by Congress.
They warned the grantees will permanently lose staff and other contracts that will make it impossible to efficiently restart them.
âFurther delays in grantmaking will have immediate and irreversible consequences for programs, AmeriCorps members and communities,â the senators wrote.
Democrats prevent Texas lawmakers from voting on new congressional map
The redrawn map was sought by Trump to shore up Republicansâ 2026 midterm prospects as his political standing falters.
Dozens of Democrats have left the state, leaving the Republican-dominated House unable to establish the quorum of lawmakers required to do business.
Abbott has threatened to remove some members of the opposition from their seats. Democrats have countered that Abbott is using âsmoke and mirrorsâ to assert legal authority he does not have.
The Congressional Budget Office warns deficits could reach $5 trillion if temporary tax cuts become permanent
The agency says that when adding interest payments to the mix, Trumpâs tax and spending cut bill, increases the nationâs debt-load by $4.1 trillion over 10 years.
Thatâs an increase of $718 billion from a prior CBO projection that did not include any macroeconomic or debt-servicing effects.
The latest deficit number comes as part of a letter CBO Director Phillip Swagel provided Monday in response to a request from Sen. Jeff Merkley, the ranking Democratic lawmaker on the Senate Budget Committee.
The GOPâs bill, signed into law last month, also included several temporary tax and spending measures, including new deductions that are designed to help meet Trumpâs pledge not to tax tips, overtime and auto interest loans.
The CBO says the billâs total impact on deficits through 2034 would rise to $5 trillion if assuming the temporary tax breaks are made permanent, along with the higher debt-servicing costs.
Senate confirms Trump nominee Brian Nesvik to lead the US Fish and Wildlife Service
The Interior Department agency helps recover imperiled species and protect their habitat.
Nesvik previously led the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, where he pushed for the removal of federal threatened-species protections for grizzly bears. If approved, it would permit the public hunting of grizzlies for the first time in decades, after they bounced back from near-extinction in the northern Rocky Mountains.
The Senate approved his nomination Friday on a 54-43 vote before leaving town for a month amid a partisan dispute over how quickly to vote on Trumpâs nominees. Democrats Jacky Rosen of Nevada and Martin Heinrich of New Mexico joined Republicans to support Nesvik.
Judge says the Trump administration canât withhold research funding on LGBTQ+ issues
Maryland-based U.S. District Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby ruled the administration canât enforce any guidelines that bar federal funding for research because it deals with gender identity, sexual orientation or diversity, equity and inclusion.
Griggsby, who was nominated by former President Joe Biden, made the ruling Friday in a lawsuit filed by the American Association of Physicians for Human Rights and individual researchers.
She previously paused its enforcement. Her latest ruling puts it on hold while the case works its way through the courts.
In their May filing, the researchers said the National Institutes of Health were denying funds.
Trumpâs deadline for the Kremlin looms but Putin shows no sign of making concessions
The coming week could mark a pivotal moment in the war between Russia and Ukraine, as Trumpâs deadline for the Kremlin to reach a peace deal approaches â or it could quietly pass without consequence.
Trumpâs special envoy Steve Witkoff was expected in Moscow midweek, just before Trumpâs Friday deadline for the Kremlin to stop the killing or face potentially severe economic penalties from Washington.
So far Trumpâs promises, threats and cajoling have failed to shift the Kremlinâs position, and the stubborn diplomatic stalemate remains in place. Meanwhile, Ukraine is losing more territory on the front line, although thereâs no sign of a looming collapse of its defenses.
Witkoff is expected to land in the Russian capital Wednesday or Thursday, according to Trump, following his trip to Israel and Gaza.
âś Read more about the war between Russia and Ukraine
US tariffs put 30,000 South African jobs at risk, officials say
That came Monday, four days before a 30% U.S. tariff on most imports from South Africa kicks in.
South Africa was slapped with one of the highest tariff rates by its third-largest trading partner â after China and the EU â creating uncertainty for the future of some export industries and catapulting a scramble for new markets outside the U.S. Tariffs come into effect Aug. 8.
In an update on mitigation measures, a senior government official warned an estimated 30,000 jobs were in jeopardy if the response to the higher tariffs was âmismanagedâ.
âWe base this on the ongoing consultations that we have with all the sectors of the economy from automotive, agriculture and all the other sectors that are going to be impacted,â said Simphiwe Hamilton, director-general of the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition.
South Africa is already grappling with stubbornly high unemployment rates.
âś Read more about tariffs on South Africa
Trump again knocks India for buying Russian oil
The president said in a post on Truth Social that India is buying âmassive amountsâ of oil from Russia and then âselling it on the Open Market for big profits.â
âThey donât care how many people in Ukraine are being killed by the Russian War Machine. Because of this, I will be substantially raising the Tariff paid by India to the USA,â he said.
It wasnât immediately clear if Trump was announcing higher rates than those he announced last week, when he said the U.S. would impose a 25% tariff on goods from India, plus an additional import tax because of the purchases of Russian oil.
The White House didnât immediately respond to a message seeking comment.
Schumer and Jeffries request meeting this week of the âbig fourâ
The top two Democratic leaders in Congress have asked the top two Republican leaders for a meeting this week to discuss a path forward for funding the federal government after the current budget year ends Sept. 30.
When lawmakers return to Washington after Labor Day, theyâll have four weeks to avoid a partial government shutdown. Democrats are also looking to prevent the expiration at the end of the year of enhanced tax credits designed to make health insurance coverage more affordable for enrollees in Affordable Care Act plans. Millions will see higher premiums when the credits expire.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer and House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries said Republicans have the responsibility to work on a bipartisan basis to avert a âpainful, unnecessary shutdown.â They were also critical of the GOPâs recent efforts to use their majority to pass Trumpâs massive tax and spending cut bill.
âToday, we wish to reiterate that we should pursue a bipartisan path â you can work with us to protect health care for the American people and chart a better course for this country,â said the letter sent to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and House Speaker Mike Johnson.
State Department proposes making some visa applicants post an up to $15k bond to apply to enter US
It would apply to applicants for business and tourist visas.
In a notice to be published in the Federal Register on Tuesday, the department said it would start a 12-month pilot program under which visa applicants from countries deemed to have high overstay rates and deficient internal document security controls could be required to post bonds of $5,000, $10,000 or $15,000 when they apply for a visa.
A preview of the notice, which was posted online at the Federal Register website Monday, said the pilot program would take effect within 15 days of its formal publication and is necessary to ensure the U.S. government isnât financially liable if a visitor doesnât comply with the terms of their visa.
The bond, which would be refunded as long as the terms of the visa are complied with, wouldnât apply to citizens of countries enrolled in the Visa Waiver Program and could be waived for others depending on an applicantsâ individual circumstances.
Trump says âGo get âemâ to actor Sydney Sweeney and bemoans âwokeâ
The president posted on Truth Social about Sweeneyâs jeans ad for American Eagle Outfitters, the second time in the last 24 hours in which he weighed in on the controversy over the ad, which sparked a debate over race and Western beauty standards.
Trump, misspelling Sweeneyâs first name, said it was âthe HOTTEST ad out there.â
âItâs for American Eagle, and the jeans are âflying of the shelves.â Go get âem Sidney,â Trump said in his post.
In the same post, Trump complained about advertisements from Bud Light (which he also misspelled) and Jaguar, along with renewing his complaints about singer Taylor Swift, declaring them all âwoke.â
Texas governor threatens to remove Democrats who left state over Trump-backed redistricting
Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott says heâll begin trying to remove Democratic lawmakers from office Monday if they donât return after dozens of them left the state in a last-resort attempt to block redrawn U.S. House maps that President Trump wants before the 2026 midterm elections.
The revolt by the state House Democrats, many of whom went to Illinois or New York on Sunday, and Abbott giving them less than 24 hours to come home ratcheted up a widening fight over congressional maps that began in Texas but has drawn in Democratic governors who have floated the possibility of rushing to redraw their own stateâs maps in retaliation. Their options, however, are limited.
At the center of the escalating impasse is Trumpâs pursuit of adding five more GOP-leaning congressional seats in Texas before next year that would bolster his partyâs chances of preserving its slim U.S. House majority.
âś Read more about the redistricting effort in Texas
Trumpâs Monday schedule
The only thing on President Trumpâs public schedule today is a lunch with Vice President JD Vance at 12:30 p.m., according to the White House.
Trump attacks Charlamagne Tha God after radio host criticizes his presidency
Trump on Sunday lashed out at radio host Charlamagne Tha God, saying in a social media post that the popular broadcaster âknows nothing about me or what I have done.â
Trumpâs comments came a day after Charlamagne, whose real name is Lenard McKelvey, criticized Trump on Fox News.
Asked how he would rate Trumpâs presidency, the radio host said, âI wouldnât give it a good rating simply because the least of us are still being impacted the worst.â
Trump said on Truth Social that Charlamagne was a âdopeâ who voted for Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris.
Charlamagne said he personally will benefit from tax breaks approved in Trumpâs tax-and-spending law, but said, âThereâs going to be so many people thatâs hurt by that bill.ââ˛
âAnything that takes away Medicaid from people and will put people in a worse financial situation than they were previously in, Iâm not for,â he added.
Charlamagne, who co-hosts a nationally syndicated radio show, âThe Breakfast Club,â added that his criticism of the Republican president was not new, adding that he âgave President Biden the same hell.â
âś Read more about Charlamagneâs comments
Smithsonian denies White House pressure to remove Trump impeachment references
The White House did not pressure the Smithsonian to remove references to Trumpâs two impeachments from an exhibit and will include him in an updated presentation âin the coming weeks,â the museum said Saturday.
The revelation that Trump was no longer listed among impeached presidents sparked concern that history was being whitewashed to appease the president.
âWe were not asked by any Administration or other government official to remove content from the exhibit,â the Smithsonian statement said.
A museum spokesperson, Phillip Zimmerman, had previously pledged that âa future and updated exhibit will include all impeachments,â but it was not clear when the new exhibit would be installed. The museum on Saturday did not say when in the coming weeks the new exhibit will be ready.
âś Read more about the Smithsonian and Trump