The House Armed Services Committee early Friday advanced a historically large defense policy bill that would authorize some $1.15 trillion for the Pentagon, giving service members a pay bump and supporting U.S. allies and acquisition reforms.
The legislation also included measures that require more accountability from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, amid some bipartisan frustration over the lack of information about military firings and the war in Iran.
Read more here.
The Hill Insider launches July 2026 — the waitlist is open now:
Premium access to Washington from the publication 100% of congressional offices read. Join before launch to lock in early access.
|
Platner ex-girlfriend accuses New York Times of ‘set up’
|
An ex-girlfriend of Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner is expressing her frustration with The New York Times over the way it portrayed her and others’ experience dating the Democrat.
Read more.
|
Live updates: Trump heads to Wisconsin; Senate funds immigration enforcement through 2029
|
The Senate pulled an all-nighter Thursday, voting just before dawn to pass the $69.5 billion budget reconciliation package that funds immigration enforcement operations through 2029.
Read more.
|
House panel adopts measure on fired senior officers, putting pressure on Hegseth, Pentagon
|
The House Armed Services Committee adopted a provision for the annual National Defense Authorization Act that would demand the Pentagon inform Congress why senior military officers were fired or dismissed within five days.
Read more.
|
Judge blocks series of Trump policies halting immigration processing
|
A federal judge on Friday vacated a series of President Trump’s policies enacted in the wake of a deadly attack on National Guard members, forcing immigration agencies to again process applications from citizens of nearly 40 countries.
Read more.
|
Ilhan Omar casts lone Democratic no vote on Ukraine aid, Russia sanctions package
|
Rep. Ilhan Omar (Minn.) was the only Democrat to vote against a bill that passed the House Thursday that would provide new military assistance to Ukraine and impose sanctions on Russia, breaking with her party as it delivered a bipartisan blow to President Trump’s foreign policy.
Read more.
|
Jobs report sparks inflation fears; Trump responds
|
President Trump on Friday pushed back on inflation concerns driven by a strong jobs report, arguing robust growth should be viewed as a positive for markets.
Read more.
|
Trump: Reflecting Pool work wasn’t simply ‘paint job’
|
President Trump dismissed criticism of the recent Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool renovations on Friday, rejecting claims the project amounted to merely a “paint job.”
Read more.
|
Trump administration spending $5M to restore, gold-plate Lincoln Memorial statues
|
The Interior Department on Thursday said it would regild the four gold-plated Arts of War and Arts of Peace equestrian statues near the Lincoln Memorial.
Read more.
|
Someone forward this newsletter to you? Sign up to get your own copy: TheHill.com/Evening. See you next time!
|
|
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment