
-
Cuba suffers fourth nationwide blackout in five months
-
New nationwide blackout hits Cuba, officials say
-
Meta strives to stifle ex-employee memoir
-
US Congress clears key hurdle in bid to avert govt shutdown
-
Gold tops $3,000 for first time on Trump tariff war, stocks rebound
-
Crew launch to ISS paves way for 'stranded' astronauts' return
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs pleads not guilty to new indictment
-
Putin, Maduro vow to boost ties in wake of Trump sanctions
-
Dozens evacuated in Italy's flood-hit Tuscany
-
Gold tops $3,000 for first time on Trump tariff threats; stocks rebound
-
US govt shutdown in balance after top Democrat avoids fight
-
Crew launch to ISS paves way for stranded astronauts' homecoming
-
Just looking at images of nature can relieve pain, study finds
-
UN chief promises to do "everything" to avoid food cuts to Rohingyas in Bangladesh
-
UniCredit gets ECB nod on Commerzbank stake, but delays merger decision
-
Sri Lanka adjusts train timings to tackle elephant deaths
-
BMW expects big hit from tariffs after 2024 profits plunge
-
Gold tops $3,000 for first time on Trump tariff threats
-
UK energy minister heads to China to talk climate
-
Syrian Druze cross armistice line for pilgrimage to Israel
-
UN chief in Rohingya refugee camp solidarity visit
-
Taiwan tech giant Foxconn's 2024 profit misses forecasts
-
UniCredit gets ECB nod for Commerzbank stake
-
BMW warns on tariffs, China as 2024 profits plunge
-
Driving ban puts brakes on young women in Turkmenistan
-
Stargazers marvel at 'Blood Moon', rare total lunar eclipse
-
Peaceful Czechs grapple with youth violence
-
From oil spills to new species: how tech reveals the ocean
-
Former sex worker records Tokyo's red-light history
-
Most Asian markets rise on hopes for bill to avert US shutdown
-
Renowned US health research hub Johns Hopkins to slash 2,000 jobs
-
You're kidding! Prince William reveals Aston Villa superstitions
-
Top US university says ending 2,000 positions due to Trump cuts
-
Stock markets tumble as Trump targets booze
-
Sea levels rise by 'unexpected' amount in 2024: NASA
-
Trump tariff threat leaves sour taste for European drinks producers
-
Ex-NOAA chief: Trump firings put lives, jobs, and science in jeopardy
-
Spain to face increasingly 'severe' droughts: report
-
Georgian designer Demna leaves Balenciaga for Gucci
-
Diet puts Greenland Inuit at risk from 'forever chemicals': study
-
'Blood Moon' rising: Rare total lunar eclipse tonight
-
Donatella Versace, fashion icon who saved slain brother's brand
-
Sweden to hold talks on countering soaring food costs
-
Asteroid probe snaps rare pics of Martian moon
-
EU, US eye greater energy ties amid Trump frictions
-
Donatella Versace to give up creative reins of brand after 28 years
-
Stock markets find little cheer as Trump targets champagne
-
UK seeks tougher term for father jailed over daughter's murder
-
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan sign border deal to boost regional stability
-
First brown bear to have brain surgery emerges from hibernation

US Congress clears key hurdle in bid to avert govt shutdown
US senators agreed Friday to move forward with a bill backed by President Donald Trump to keep the government funded, greatly reducing the chances of a feared weekend government shutdown, as opposition from the minority Democrats collapsed.
The Republican-led Senate muscled the legislation through a preliminary ballot that required Democratic cooperation to reach a 60-vote threshold -- clearing it for final passage before the midnight deadline.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer had shocked his rank-and-file Democrats when he delivered a speech late on Thursday announcing he would back the Republican-drafted six-month funding proposal.
The concession -- which took some of the suspense out of the funding fight -- capped a deeply polarizing, weeks-long standoff.
Although the government would begin grinding to a halt at midnight with no deal, many Democrats are furious at Trump-backed spending cuts in the package, which passed the Republican-controlled House earlier this week.
The legislation -- which keeps the government open through September -- still needs one more approval vote but is now on a glide path to Trump's desk, because of a lower, 51-vote threshold required for final passage.
Schumer published an op-ed in The New York Times defending his decision to support the package, a U-turn that sparked an angry backlash from critics who accused him of a "betrayal," and of "caving."
Republicans control the White House and both sides of Congress, although Senate procedural rules require them to get support from a handful of Democrats for most bills in the upper chamber.
But Democrats are smarting over Trump's cuts, which have shredded entire sections of government and seen Congress bypassed in what critics and some judges have called an unconstitutional exercise of the White House's power.
The cuts have been announced by the so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Trump's advisor and top donor, mega-billionaire Elon Musk.
Infuriated by what they see as the SpaceX and Tesla CEO's lawless rampage through the federal bureaucracy, backbench Democrats wanted their leaders to fight hard against DOGE and Trump -- particularly by withdrawing cooperation in the funding fight.
- 'Dumpster fire' -
But Schumer argued in his op-ed that a shutdown would have allowed Musk and Trump to "destroy vital government services at a significantly faster rate than they can right now."
"Under a shutdown, the Trump administration would have wide-ranging authority to deem whole agencies, programs and personnel nonessential, furloughing staff members with no promise they would ever be rehired," Schumer argued.
Shutdowns are rare but disruptive and costly, as everyday functions like food inspections halt and parks, monuments and federal buildings shut up shop.
Up to 900,000 federal employees can be furloughed, while another million deemed essential -- from air traffic controllers to police -- work but forego pay until normal service resumes.
Trump praised Schumer for having the "guts" to do "the right thing" in a Truth Social post that hailed "a whole new direction and beginning" for the country.
Success for the funding bill will come as a relief to Schumer, who was struggling to keep the Senate Democrats together under a barrage of criticism from his own side.
Patty Murray, the top Democrat in the funding negotiations, called the House bill a "dumpster fire" while leftist former presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders said it would "take food out of the mouths of hungry children."
More than 100 activists gathered for an early morning demonstration in front of Schumer's Brooklyn high-rise, shouting "Chuck betrayed us" and "Dems -- don't be chickens in a coup."
Although final passage for the bill now looks inevitable, getting it to Trump's desk in time to avoid a shutdown starting could still be fraught with pitfalls.
Y.Uduike--CPN