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  • Judge blocks Trump administration from sending migrant teens to adult detention

    Judge blocks Trump administration from sending migrant teens to adult detention

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    A judge on Saturday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from sending underage migrants to adult detention centers once they turn 18. 

    U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras said the new policy violates an order he issued in 2021 that instructed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement not to send any migrant to an ICE detention center after they turn 18. 

    Underage migrants aren’t held in ICE detention centers. They’re held in centers run by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. 

    Fox News Digital has reached out to ICE for comment. 

    CONSERVATIVES RALLY AROUND APPLE REMOVING ICE-TRACKING APPS TO PROTECT LAW ENFORCEMENT

    ICE vehicle

    U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras said the new policy violates an order he issued in 2021 that directed U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement not to send any migrant to an ICE detention center after they turn 18.  (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)

    The Trump administration is now offering teen migrants a $2,500 stipend to leave the United States voluntarily, according to several reports citing a letter sent Friday by the Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Refugee Resettlement to shelters housing migrant children.

    Several immigration rights groups had asked Contreras to intervene in the filing made just after midnight Saturday morning. 

    Last month, another judge blocked the Trump administration from deporting certain Guatemalan minors to their home country after the government walked back claims that it intended to reunite the youths with their parents.

    Judge Timothy Kelly, who issued the order, said the Trump administration could not show that any parents wanted their children back.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION OFFERS TEEN MIGRANTS $2,500 TO LEAVE US VOLUNTARILY: REPORTS

    Legs of migrant children in a line

    Immigrants line up in the dining hall at a new U.S. government holding center for migrant children in Carrizo Springs, Texas, July 9, 2019.  (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

    “That explanation crumbled like a house of cards about a week later,” Kelly wrote in his order. “There is no evidence before the Court that the parents of these children sought their return.”

    Michelle Lapointe, a lawyer for the American Immigration Council, one of the organizations involved in the filing, told The Associated Press, “All of these are pieces of the same general policy to coerce immigrant youth into giving up their right to seek protection in the United States.” 

    Migrant children in the U.S. are often released into foster care or to family members as long as they’re not considered a flight risk or a danger. 

    federal vehicle outosde of ICE facility

    A federal agent sits in a vehicle outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building Sept. 24, 2025, in Broadview, Ill. (AP Photo/Erin Hooley)

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    Lawyers for some of the migrants said they heard that ICE was telling shelters that children turning 18 would be taken to ICE detention centers even if they already had plans to be released and that they could only be released on a case-by-case basis for “urgent humanitarian reasons” or “significant public benefit.”

    Fox News’ Ashley Oliver and Michael Dorgan and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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  • Hegseth leads 3,068 people in record-breaking pushup feat

    Hegseth leads 3,068 people in record-breaking pushup feat

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    U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth had a record-breaking presence during Navy’s 34-31 win over Air Force on Saturday in Annapolis, Maryland. 

    Hegseth led a push-up brigade with cadets, officers and fans at the game that broke a Guiness World Record. Hegseth’s charge of 3,068 broke the record for most people doing push-ups simultaneously for one minute.

    Navy not only beat Air Force’s football team, but it also took the push-up record from the Air Force Academy.

    CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

    The previous record was 2,926, achieved by the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on April 20, 2023, according to Guiness World Records.

    Hegseth’s feat drew praise on social media. 

    Hegseth was a big part of the festivities for Navy’s football team on Saturday. 

    He also joined in on the post-game celebration and gave the players a boisterous locker room speech after their thrilling win. 

    TRUMP DECLARES ‘REAWAKENING’ OF ‘WARRIOR SPIRIT,’ UNWAVERING SUPPORT FOR MILITARY: ‘I HAVE YOUR BACKS’

    Hegseth push-ups

    Pete Hegseth led a record-breaking push-up charge at Navy’s football game on Saturday. (Department of War)

    The victory gave Navy (5-0) a leg up in holding on to the Commander-in-Chief’s trophy, awarded to the winner of the round-robin between the Navy, Air Force and Army service academies. 

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    Navy will look to clinch the trophy in the annual Army-Navy game on Dec. 13. 

    Earlier on Saturday, Hegseth fired the navy chief of staff Jon Harrison, who had been appointed in January. 

    Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.



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  • New Jersey gubernatorial race heats up over taxes as Sherrill, Ciattarelli clash

    New Jersey gubernatorial race heats up over taxes as Sherrill, Ciattarelli clash

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    The Democratic and Republican nominees in a crucial election for governor in New Jersey are trading fire over taxes in one of the most heavily taxed states in the nation.

    Rep. Mikie Sherrill, the 2025 Democratic gubernatorial nominee, on Friday launched a new ad labeling her GOP rival Jack Ciattarelli “high tax Jack.”

    And Ciattarelli, following the first debate between the two candidates, emphasized on social media that Sherrill “refused to rule out raising your taxes.”

    Taxes, along with affordability, are top issues on the New Jersey campaign trail in one of the most expensive states in the country.

    FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN SPARKS BLAME GAME IN CRUCIAL RACE FOR GOVERNOR

    Rep. Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey appears during a gubernatorial debate.

    Democratic gubernatorial nominee Rep. Mikie Sherrill of New Jersey responds to questions during the first general election debate with Republican opponent Jack Ciattarelli. Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Lawrenceville, N.J.  (AP Photo/Noah K. Murray)

    The Sherrill campaign ad spotlights the “taxes are on the table” comment made by Ciattarelli running mate Jim Gannon earlier this week at the lieutenant governor’s debate.

    “Whoa Jack, what the [bleep] did your guy just say,” says the narrator in the digital spot.

    The debate answer by Gannon, a county sheriff, came as he was asked whether the Ciattarelli administration would consider increasing taxes on millionaires.

    FIVE RACES TO WATCH WITH FIVE WEEKS TO GO UNTIL ELECTION DAY 2025

    “We have to look at it. You have to look at the whole thing,” Gannon added. “What I’m saying is, millionaires, we can’t just beat up the millionaires. The millionaires, many times, are employers; they’re employing us.”

    Following the debate, the Ciattarelli campaign said that Gannon meant to say that cutting taxes is on the table, not raising them. 

    New Jersey Republican gubernatorial nominee Jack Ciattarelli

    Jack Ciattarelli, the Republican nominee for governor of New Jersey, takes part at a candidate forum at Fairleigh Dickinson University, on Oct. 1, 2025 in Madison, N.J.  (Paul Steinhauser – Fox News)

    Ciattarelli, who came close to defeating Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy four years ago, appeared to do some cleanup in a Fox News Digital interview the day after the debate.

    “There will be no tax increases under Governor Ciattarelli. And I would put forth a very specific plan on how to decrease the income tax and the property tax here in New Jersey. No tax increases,” he said.

    HEAD HERE FOR FOX NEWS’ 2025 ELECTION COVERAGE

    The crossfire over taxes came a week after Sherrill, at her first debate with Ciattarelli, appeared to give her rival some political ammunition with her answer to a question on whether she’d consider raising the sales tax if elected governor.

    “I’m not going to commit to anything right now, because I’m not just going to tell you what you want to hear,” Sherrill responded.

    mikie sherrill and jack ciattarelli

    Republican candidate Jack Ciattarelli, left, shakes hands with Democratic candidate for governor Mikie Sherrill, right, before a debate on Sunday, Sept. 21, 2025, in Lawrenceville, N.J.  (AP Photo/Noah K. Murray)

    Ciattarelli took to social media following the debate to write, “Both candidates were asked tonight if they would commit to not raising your taxes as Governor. Only one would. It was me. Mikie refused. Hear that loud & clear New Jersey: Mikie Sherrill refused to rule out raising your taxes. Here’s the truth: We just can’t afford Mikie.”

    But the next day, Sherrill, in a campaign release, committed to not increasing the sales tax. 

    “I will not raise the sales tax as your governor,” she said.

    TRUMP LOOMS LARGE OVER THIS CRUCIAL RACE FOR GOVERNOR

    Taxes were the top concern on the minds of New Jersey voters in a Fox News poll released this week.

    In spontaneous, unprompted replies, 34% said taxes are the biggest problem facing the state, with 20% saying the cost of living. Other issues like housing and energy costs, were mentioned by 5% or fewer. 

    The poll, which was conducted Sept. 25–28, indicated that Sherrill was preferred by 16 points among those whose priority is the cost of living, while tax voters favored Ciattarelli by 5 points.

    Sherrill, a Navy veteran who flew helicopters during her years in the military and who later served as a federal prosecutor before first winning election to Congress in 2018, held a 7-point lead over Ciattarelli among registered voters questioned in the Fox News survey.

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    But Ciattarelli, a former state lawmaker and a certified public accountant who started a medical publishing company before getting into politics, touted in his Fox News Digital interview that “the energy is off the charts, and the fact that I’m being endorsed by Democratic mayors around the state says a whole lot about people wanting change here in the state of New Jersey.”

    The two candidates will face off next week in their second and final debate before voters head to the polls in the election to succeed term-limited Murphy.

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  • Federal judge criticized for 8-year sentence in Kavanaugh assassination attempt

    Federal judge criticized for 8-year sentence in Kavanaugh assassination attempt

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    The federal judge who sentenced the defendant found guilty of attempting to assassinate U.S. Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is being criticized by conservatives on social media for the length of the sentence and for concerns over Nicholas Roske, who goes by Sophie, identifying as transgender.

    Judge Deborah Boardman, a Biden appointee, sentenced Roske to eight years in prison on Friday for attempting to assassinate Kavanaugh in June 2022, in the weeks before the Supreme Court’s landmark Dobbs decision.

    The sentence is far lower than what the Department of Justice (DOJ) had sought. Prosecutors said Roske should face at least 30 years, while Roske’s defense team had asked for eight.

    Boardman said during the sentencing hearing that while Roske’s actions were “reprehensible,” she also considered a string of mitigating factors, including that Roske “spontaneously confessed to and cooperated with police.”

    BONDI PRAISES RYAN ROUTH VERDICT, SAYS ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT WAS AN ‘AFFRONT TO OUR VERY NATION ITSELF’

    Deborah Boardman speaking to Congress

    Federal Judge Deborah Boardman sentenced Nicholas Roske, who now goes by Sophie, to eight years in prison on Friday for attempting to murder Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. (Fox News)

    “Maryland U.S. District Judge Deborah Boardman—a Biden appointee—is a national disgrace,” Mike Davis, a conservative lawyer and strategist and former Chief Counsel for Nominations to Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley, wrote on X on Friday. “She only sentenced to 8 years, instead of 30, someone who attempted to murder Justice Kavanaugh and his family in their home. Make no mistake: Today’s Democrats want conservatives killed.”

    Another person wrote that Boardman “needs to be removed from the bench right the f— now,” then shared a screenshot of another post mentioning that Boardman asked if Roske would be sent to a women’s prison. 

    FEDERAL JUDGE RELEASES WOMAN ACCUSED OF THREATENING TO KILL TRUMP

    Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh

    The person who attempted to assassinate Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh in June 2022 was sentenced to eight years in prison on Friday. (Niall Carson/PA Images via Getty Images)

    Author M.A. Rothman called the sentence “pathetic.”

    “A guy who showed up at a Supreme Court Justice’s house armed and ready to k*ll him just got a lighter sentence than some people get for tax crimes — and the judge turned it into a trans acceptance story,” he added. “This is beyond parody. The DOJ wanted 30 years. He got 8. And the media barely blinked.” 

    Another person on X balked at Boardman considering the “fact that he now identifies as a woman into giving him a lower sentence.”

    The DOJ plans to appeal the sentence, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Friday. 

    Pro-life and pro-choice protesters demonstrate outside the Supreme Court building

    People protest in front of the Supreme Court over the court’s Dobbs ruling in June 2022 in Washington, D.C.  (Allison Robbert/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

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    “The attempted assassination of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh was a disgusting attack against our entire judicial system by a profoundly disturbed individual,” she wrote on X. “@TheJusticeDept will be appealing the woefully insufficient sentence imposed by the district court, which does not reflect the horrific facts of this case.” 

    Boardman was appointed as a U.S. magistrate judge for the District of Maryland in 2019, until she was nominated by former President Joe Biden to be a U.S. district judge. She was confirmed by the Senate in 2021. 

    Fox News’ Ashley Oliver and Jake Gibson contributed to this report.

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  • Johnson cancels House votes to pressure Senate Democrats on government shutdown

    Johnson cancels House votes to pressure Senate Democrats on government shutdown

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    Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is sending a pointed signal to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., as the 2025 government shutdown is poised to enter a second week.

    The leader of the House of Representatives canceled chamber activities for next week, effectively directing lawmakers to remain in their home districts until at least Oct. 14.

    Johnson appears to be raising the stakes on Senate Democrats, who keep refusing the GOP’s plan to fund government agencies on a short-term basis in favor of making demands on healthcare that Republicans are calling unreasonable.

    Originally, the House had been slated to return to a regular legislative schedule on Oct. 7. The full House was last in session on Sept. 19.

    HERE’S WHAT TRUMP WANTS TO DO TO RESHAPE THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DURING THE SHUTDOWN

    A split image of Chuck Schumer and Mike Johnson

    House Speaker Mike Johnson, right, is criticizing Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, left, for refusing to agree to a GOP-led plan to avert a government shutdown. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images; Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

    Johnson warned earlier on Friday that the House may not return until Schumer and Democrats agreed with Republicans’ bill.

    “We passed it, and it’s been rejected by the Senate,” the House speaker told reporters during a news conference. “So the House will come back into session and do its work as soon as Chuck Schumer allows us to reopen the government. That’s plain and simple.”

    House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., told Fox News Digital during his own Friday news conference that he would summon his Democratic caucus back into D.C. next week whether Republicans were there or not.

    Meanwhile, two sources told Fox News Digital earlier on Friday that it was one of several strategies that House GOP leaders were considering, but were waiting to see how the Senate’s Friday afternoon vote played out.

    It was the fourth time Senate Democrats rejected the GOP’s funding plan, a mostly flat extension of fiscal year (FY) 2025 government funding levels. The measure, called a continuing resolution (CR), would also include $88 million in security funding for lawmakers, the White House and the judicial branch — which has bipartisan support.

    hakeem jeffries and chuck schumer

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., right, talk with reporters following their meeting with President Donald Trump and Republican leaders on the government funding crisis on Sept. 29, 2025.  (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)

    But Democrats in the House and Senate were infuriated by being sidelined in federal funding talks. 

    They have been pushing for an extension of Obamacare subsidies enhanced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those enhancements would expire by the end of 2025 without congressional action.

    Democrats have also introduced a counter-proposal for a CR that would keep the government funded through Oct. 31 while reversing the GOP’s cuts to Medicaid made in their “One Big, Beautiful Bill.”

    GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN SPARKS GOP PLAN TO PENALIZE LAWMAKERS WITH NEW SALARY TAX

    The counter-proposal would have also restored federal funding to NPR and PBS that was cut by the Trump administration earlier this year.

    Republicans have panned that plan as a non-starter full of partisan demands, while pointing out that Democrats have voted for a “clean” measure similar to the GOP proposal 13 times during former President Joe Biden’s time in office.

    Canceling next week’s House votes also puts off the probability that lawmakers would have to vote on making the Department of Justice release even more files related to Jeffrey Epstein.

    Capitol building with falling money

    The government has entered a partial shutdown after Congress failed to reach an agreement on federal funding. (Getty Images)

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    Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., needed just one more person to sign onto a petition aimed at forcing a vote on the Epstein files — a signature they would have gotten if Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva, D-Ariz., was sworn in next week following her special election victory.

    House GOP leaders have panned that petition as unserious and superfluous, having already directed the House Oversight Committee to investigate the DOJ’s handling of Epstein’s case.

    Johnson told Fox News Digital earlier this week that he was concerned the bipartisan measure was written in a way that it would not protect sensitive information regarding Epstein’s victims.

    When asked about Johnson’s move during his own Friday news conference, Schumer told reporters, “Johnson and the House Republicans care more about protecting the Epstein files than protecting the American people.”

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  • Government shutdown and Hamas ultimatum mark Trump’s busy week

    Government shutdown and Hamas ultimatum mark Trump’s busy week

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    The government shutdown underscored President Donald Trump‘s whirlwind work week after Senate lawmakers failed to reach a budget agreement in a stalemate that’s anticipated to spur “thousands” of federal layoffs. 

    The shutdown took effect after the clock struck midnight Wednesday and has continued since. Trump championed earlier in the week that he did not want a shutdown to bring the government to a screeching halt, but remarked some “good” could come from it as he looks to further trim down the size of the government. 

    “A lot of good can come down from shutdowns,” he said Tuesday. “We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want, and they’d be Democrat things. But they want open borders. They want men playing in women’s sports. They want transgender for everybody. They never stop. They don’t learn. We won an election in a landslide.” 

    “Thousands” of federal employees are set to face layoffs, according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, while Trump met with Office of Management and Budget chief Russell Vought Thursday to map out which agencies and programs could be targeted. 

    HERE’S WHAT TRUMP WANTS TO DO TO RESHAPE THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DURING THE SHUTDOWN

    Donald Trump speaking to military senior leaders with American flag backdrop

    The government shutdown underscored President Donald Trump’s whirlwind work week.  (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

    House lawmakers passed a short-term extension earlier in September of fiscal year 2025 funding, aimed at keeping the government open through Nov. 21. Senate lawmakers, however, could not reach an agreement on the budget ahead of the Oct. 1 deadline, sparking the shutdown. 

    Democrats expressed frustration they were sidelined from spending negotiations, as well as the GOP bill excluding enhanced Obamacare subsidies from the Biden era that are set to lapse at the end of 2025. 

    KAROLINE LEAVITT WARNS DEMOCRATS FACE ‘VERY REAL’ CONSEQUENCES IF SHUTDOWN STANDOFF DRAGS ON

    The Trump administration and Republicans have since pinned blame for the shutdown on Democrats pushing to include taxpayer-funded medical benefits for illegal immigrants. Democrats have denied the claims and pinned blame on Republicans for the shutdown. 

    It is unclear how long the shutdown will last as the Senate comes to stalemate on votes. 

    Trump and Netanyahu shake hands

    President Trump greets Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu outside the White House Sept. 29, 2025, as the pair works to achieve peace in Gaza.  (Annabelle Gordon/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    Trump’s Hamas ultimatum 

    Outside of Capitol Hill buzzing about the shutdown, Trump also gave Hamas terrorists until Sunday to reach a peace agreement as the war with Israel, which started Oct. 7, 2023, continues raging. Trump met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Monday at the White House, where he announced a 20-point plan to end the Gaza war. 

    Hamas is now left to agree to the plan or face the military wrath of Israel. 

    TRUMP UNVEILS 20-POINT PLAN TO SECURE PEACE IN GAZA, INCLUDING GRANTING SOME HAMAS MEMBERS ‘AMNESTY’

    “They will be given one last chance,” Trump said in a Friday Truth Social post. “THIS DEAL ALSO SPARES THE LIVES OF ALL REMAINING HAMAS FIGHTERS!”

    “We will have PEACE in the Middle East one way or the other. The violence and bloodshed will stop,” Trump added. “RELEASE THE HOSTAGES, ALL OF THEM, INCLUDING THE BODIES OF THOSE THAT ARE DEAD, NOW! An Agreement must be reached with Hamas by Sunday Evening at SIX (6) P.M., Washington, D.C. time.”

    Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump, both wearing navy suits, shaking hands in front of American flag on stage

    U.S. generals from around the world were summoned to convene with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and President Donald Trump at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia.  (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press )

    Hegseth, Trump meet with top military brass 

    U.S. generals from around the world were summoned to convene with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth and Trump at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia Tuesday, when Trump celebrated “reawakening the warrior spirit” within the military. 

    “We’re bringing back a focus on fitness, ability, character and strength,” Trump said Tuesday. “And that’s because the purpose of America’s military is not to protect anyone’s feelings. It’s to protect our republic.”

    TRUMP DECLARES ‘REAWAKENING’ OF ‘WARRIOR SPIRIT,’ UNWAVERING SUPPORT FOR MILITARY: ‘I HAVE YOUR BACKS’

    Trump criticized the military’s recent shift toward political correctness. 

    “The apparatus of our country was not set up for merit,” Trump said. “It was set up for political correctness. And you can never be great if you’re going to do that.”

    “We will not be politically correct when it comes to defending American freedom, and we will be a fighting and winning machine,” he continued. “We want to fight. We want to win, and we want to fight as little as possible.”

    US in ‘non-international armed conflict’ with drug cartels

    The Trump administration also sent a memo to Congress Thursday explaining the United States is now “in a non-international armed conflict” with drug cartels, which administration officials have designated as “terrorist organizations.”

    TRUMP ADMIN TELLS CONGRESS IT DETERMINED US ENGAGED IN FORMAL ‘ARMED CONFLICT’ WITH ‘TERRORIST’ DRUG CARTELS

    “The President directed these actions consistent with his responsibility to protect Americans and United States interests abroad and in furtherance of United States national security and foreign policy interests, pursuant to his constitutional authority as Commander in Chief and Chief Executive to conduct foreign relations,” the memo stated.

    The White House said the memo was filed following a Sept. 15 strike on “a Designated Terrorist Organization.” 

    The memo follows Trump vowing to unleash the U.S. military on drug cartels amid a buildup in the Caribbean in August, and has signed off on a series of U.S. military strikes against alleged drug vessels from Venezuela to combat the flow of illegal drugs into the U.S. 

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    The most recent U.S. strike on an alleged drug trafficking vessel was carried out Friday off the coast of Venezuela.

    Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind, Louis Casiano and Morgan Philips contributed to this report. 

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  • Johnson says House GOP winning messaging war amid government shutdown

    Johnson says House GOP winning messaging war amid government shutdown

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    House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., said Republicans are winning the messaging war over the ongoing government shutdown and urged his conference to keep the heat on congressional Democrats during a private call with lawmakers on Saturday.

    The call came on the fourth day of the shutdown, a day after Senate Democrats again rejected a GOP-led plan to keep federal agencies funded through Nov. 21.

    During the call, Johnson and other House GOP leaders urged fellow Republicans to use this next week in their districts to tell constituents about what the ongoing shutdown means for them, Fox News Digital was told.

    The House speaker expressed confidence that the shutdown would end quickly if Republicans “hold the line,” Fox News Digital was told, and praised the House GOP’s unity so far amid the fallout.

    GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN SPARKS GOP PLAN TO PENALIZE LAWMAKERS WITH NEW SALARY TAX

    Mike Johnson and Hakeem Jeffries

    Republicans led by Speaker Mike Johnson and Democrats led by House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries are trading blame over the current government shutdown. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo; J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)

    Johnson also told Republicans toward the end of the call that the House would return only after Senate Democrats voted to reopen the government, a source said.

    House and Senate GOP leaders have signaled that they will not budge from their current federal funding proposal, a short-term spending bill called a continuing resolution (CR) that would keep spending levels roughly flat for seven weeks.

    That measure passed the House — largely along party lines — on Sept. 19. The House has since been out of session in a bid to put pressure on Senate Democrats to accept the plan.

    It is also why Johnson opted on Friday to designate the next week as a district work period, canceling a previously planned legislative session from Tuesday through Friday.

    Johnson told House Republicans on the Saturday call that it was the best way to prevent “Democrat disruptions,” Fox News Digital was told. 

    No Republicans voiced disagreement with the plan, Fox News Digital was told, signaling the GOP’s unity on the issue.

    He told reporters during a press conference Friday morning that the House may not return until Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Democrats agreed with Republicans’ bill.

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer at the Capitol

    Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., turns to an aide during a news conference at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, June 3, 2025.  (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)

    “We passed it, and it’s been rejected by the Senate,” Johnson told reporters during a news conference. “So the House will come back into session and do its work as soon as Chuck Schumer allows us to reopen the government. That’s plain and simple.”

    Democrats, who were infuriated by being sidelined in the federal funding negotiations, have been pushing for an extension of Obamacare subsidies enhanced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those enhancements would expire by the end of 2025 without congressional action.

    Democrats have also introduced a counter-proposal for a CR that would keep the government funded through Oct. 31 while reversing the GOP’s cuts to Medicaid made in their “One Big, Beautiful Bill” (OBBB).

    HERE’S WHAT TRUMP WANTS TO DO TO RESHAPE THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DURING THE SHUTDOWN

    The counter-proposal would have also restored federal funding to NPR and PBS that was cut by the Trump administration earlier this year.

    Republicans have panned that plan as a non-starter full of partisan demands, while pointing out that Democrats have voted for a “clean” measure similar to the GOP proposal 13 times during former President Biden’s time in office.

    On the Saturday call, House GOP leaders encouraged Republicans to emphasize that Democrats’ counter-proposal would restore funding for illegal immigrants receiving Medicaid dollars that was cut by the so-called Big, Beautiful Bill, Fox News Digital was told.

    Capitol building with falling money

    The government is in a partial shutdown after Congress failed to reach an agreement on federal funding. (Getty Images)

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    Democrats have accused Republicans of lying about that line of attack.

    GOP leaders also emphasized on the call that military members are not paid during government shutdowns, urging Republicans to make that point in their districts, while also warning that federal flood insurance funding is also in danger of drying up.

    Fox News Digital was also told that House Majority Leader Steve Scalise, R-La., said the next important date in the shutdown fight would be Oct. 15, the date of servicemembers’ next paycheck — which they could miss if the shutdown is ongoing.

    Senate Democrats have now rejected the GOP’s funding plan four times since Sept. 19. The Senate is expected to next vote on the bill again on Monday.

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  • Government shutdown costs $400M daily for 750K furloughed workers

    Government shutdown costs $400M daily for 750K furloughed workers

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    The government shutdown costs taxpayers $400 million every day to pay federal employees who are not actively working, totaling $1.2 billion as of Friday, Congressional Budget Office (CBO) data published by Sen. Joni Ernst’s, R-Iowa, office estimates. 

    “Schumer’s Shutdown Shenanigans mean taxpayers will be on the hook for another $400 million today to pay 750,000 non-essential bureaucrats NOT to work,” Ernst said in comment to Fox News Digital Friday. 

    “Democrats’ political stunt to fight for taxpayer-funded healthcare for illegal immigrants has officially become a billion-dollar boondoggle,” she added. “Enough has to be enough for the radical left. We must reopen the government and get Washington back to work serving veterans, families, and hardworking Americans.” 

    A law passed in 2019 requires furloughed employees receive backpay after a funding agreement is reached and a shutdown ends. The CBO found that the furloughed employees’ daily cost of compensation sits at about $400 million, or a total of $1.2 billion as of Friday. 

    WHITE HOUSE SAYS FEDERAL LAYOFFS COULD HIT ‘THOUSANDS’ AHEAD OF TRUMP, VOUGHT MEETING

    Republican Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa

    Sen. Joni Ernst’s office released Congressional Budget Office data showing the government shutdown is expected to cost taxpayers $400 million a day to pay furloughed federal employees.  (Reuters)

    “Using information from the agencies’ contingency plans and the Office of Personnel Management (OPM), CBO estimates that under a lapse in discretionary funding for fiscal year 2026 about 750,000 employees could be furloughed each day; the total daily cost of their compensation would be roughly $400 million,” a letter from the Congressional Budget Office to Ernst stated Tuesday. The data was released after the Iowa Republican requested CBO provide a data cost breakdown of the shutdown in September as the deadline clock ran out. 

    The CBO data largely was based on statistics from a five-week partial shutdown that ran from Dec. 22, 2018, until Jan. 25, 2019, under the first Trump administration, the office noted in its letter to Ernst.

    The letter added that the number of furloughed federal employees, which is currently estimated to sit at about 750,000 staffers, could vary by the day “because some agencies might furlough more employees the longer a shutdown persists and others might recall some initially furloughed employees.” 

    The government shut down early Wednesday morning after Senate lawmakers failed to reach a budget agreement. House lawmakers had approved a short-term extension of fiscal year 2025 funding earlier in September that aimed to keep the government funded through Nov. 21. 

    The Trump administration and Republicans have since pinned blame for the shutdown on Democrats, claiming they sought taxpayer-funded medical benefits for illegal immigrants. Democrats have denied they want to fund healthcare for illegal immigrants, and instead have blamed Republicans for the shutdown.

    Fox News Digital reached out to Schumer’s office for comment on the CBO data and Ernst’s remarks but did not immediately receive a reply. 

    White House spokesman Kush Desai slammed Democrats as “not serious people” when asked about the CBO data Friday morning. 

    HERE’S WHAT TRUMP WANTS TO DO TO RESHAPE THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT DURING THE SHUTDOWN

    “Democrats are burning $400 million a day to pay federal workers not to work because they want to spend $200 billion on free health care for illegal aliens,” Desai told Fox News Digital. “These are not serious people.” 

    Trump repeatedly has said he did not want a shutdown to unfold, but noted Tuesday as the clock ran out that some “good” could come from it. 

    Russell Vought speaking as Mike Johnson, John Thune and JD Vance listen

    The administration is expected to lay off federal employees across various agencies amid the shutdown, with President Donald Trump meeting Office of Management and Budget chief Russell Vought, center, to map out which departments and programs to target for cuts.  (Evan Vucci/The Associated Press)

    “A lot of good can come down from shutdowns,” he told reporters. “We can get rid of a lot of things that we didn’t want, and they’d be Democrat things. But they want open borders. They want men playing in women’s sports. They want transgender for everybody. They never stop. They don’t learn. We won an election in a landslide.” 

    SOCIAL SECURITY, AIRPORTS, FOOD STAMPS: HOW ARE YOU AFFECTED DURING A GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN?

    The administration is expected to lay off federal employees across various agencies amid the shutdown, with Trump meeting Office of Management and Budget chief Russell Vought Thursday to map out which departments and programs to target for cuts. 

    Karoline Leavitt in the White House

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks to reporters outside the West Wing of the White House in Washington, Oct. 2, 2025. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters Thursday that “thousands” of employees will likely be laid off. 

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    “Look, it’s likely going to be in the thousands,” Leavitt said. “It’s a very good question. And that’s something that the Office of Management and Budget and the entire team at the White House here, again, is unfortunately having to work on today.” 

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  • Virginia Gov. Youngkin says Jay Jones’ texts are ‘beyond disqualifying’

    Virginia Gov. Youngkin says Jay Jones’ texts are ‘beyond disqualifying’

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    Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin said state Democratic attorney general candidate Jay Jones should abandon his campaign “in disgrace” after he once remarked on shooting a former Virginia House speaker in texts with another lawmaker. 

    Texts obtained by Fox News Digital on Friday showed an August 2022 conversation involving Jones — then a recently departed delegate from Norfolk — and Delegate Carrie Coyner, R-Chester. At one point, Jones, referencing then-House Speaker Todd Gilbert, R-Shenandoah, wrote: “Three people, two bullets. Gilbert, Hitler and Pol Pot. Gilbert gets two bullets to the head.” 

    “This violent, disgusting rhetoric targeted at an elected official and his children is beyond disqualifying,” Youngkin wrote in an X post Saturday. “Jay Jones said that ‘Gilbert gets two bullets to the head’ and then hoped his children would die. Read those words again.” 

    “There is no ‘gosh, I’m sorry’ here. Jones doesn’t have the morality or character to drop out of this race, and his running mates, Abigail Spanberger, Ghazala Hashmi, and every elected Democrat in Virginia don’t have the courage to call on him to step away from this campaign in disgrace,” he added. 

    VIRGINIA AG FLAMES OPPONENT FOR SUPPORTING SEX-CHANGE ID LAW HE BLAMES FOR LATEST PEDOPHILE CASES 

    AG candidate Jay Jones split with Former House Speaker Todd Gilbert

    Virginia attorney general candidate Jay Jones, left, and former Virginia House Republican Leader Todd Gilbert, right. (Trevor Metcalfe/The Virginian-Pilot/Tribune News Service via Getty Images; Bill O’Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    A spokesperson for Coyner’s campaign confirmed the veracity of the texts first reported by National Review, saying they were “disturbing and disqualifying for anyone who wants to seek public office.” 

    “Jay Jones wished violence on the children of a colleague and joked about shooting Todd Gilbert. It’s disgusting and unbecoming of any public official,” the spokesperson said. 

    Jones is running against incumbent Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares, a Republican. 

    The Republican Attorneys General Association (RAGA) also called on Jones to “immediately withdraw” from the race following “his abhorrent text messages.” 

    AFTER DEATH THREAT, VIRGINIA LAWMAKER SAYS ABIGAIL SPANBERGER CAN’T ESCAPE ‘RAGE’ REMARKS 

    Jay Jones and Glenn Youngkin are seen in split image

    Virginia Democratic attorney general candidate Jay Jones, left, and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. (Maxine Wallace/The Washington Post via Getty Images; Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

    “There is no place for political violence, including joking about it — especially from an elected official. Jay Jones should drop out of the Attorney General’s race. His comments are not acceptable from someone who wants to represent law enforcement,” RAGA Chairman Kris Kobach said. 

    In a statement released to the media, Jones said, “I take full responsibility for my actions, and I want to issue my deepest apology to Speaker Gilbert and his family.”  

    “Reading back those words made me sick to my stomach. I am embarrassed, ashamed, and sorry. I have reached out to Speaker Gilbert to apologize directly to him, his wife Jennifer, and their children. I cannot take back what I said; I can only take full accountability and offer my sincere apology,” Jones continued. 

    Jay Jones texted controversial things about Del. Todd Gilbert

    A text message from Jay Jones to Del. Carrie Coyner. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

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     “Virginians deserve honest leaders who admit when they are wrong and own up to their mistakes. This was a grave mistake, and I will work every day to prove to the people of Virginia that I will fight for them as Attorney General,” he added. 

    Fox News Digital’s Danielle Wallace and Charles Creitz contributed to this report. 

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  • Trump racks up Supreme Court wins on emergency docket

    Trump racks up Supreme Court wins on emergency docket

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    President Donald Trump has an almost flawless record on the Supreme Court’s emergency docket this year, a streak that has delivered crucial moments of relief to the government as it fights hundreds of lawsuits challenging the president’s agenda.

    The Supreme Court has ruled in Trump’s favor on government cuts, nationwide injunctions, immigration policies and more, leading the White House to tout what it recently counted as 21 victories before the high court.

    Those victories are, however, temporary. The upcoming term, which begins Monday, will allow the justices to begin weighing the full merits of some of these court disputes and ultimately cement or undo key parts of the Trump agenda.

    Jonathan Adler, a William & Mary Law School professor, attributed the interim wins to the Supreme Court’s desire to narrow the judicial branch’s role in policymaking.

    TRUMP’S CONTROVERSIAL PLAN TO FIRE FEDERAL WORKERS FINDS FAVOR WITH SUPREME COURT

    Trump, Roberts

    President Donald Trump greets Chief Justice John G. Roberts as he arrives to deliver an address to a joint session of Congress at the U.S. Capitol on March 4, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)

    Speaking during a Federalist Society panel this week, Adler said the high court’s thinking might be that “lower courts are doing too much. We’re going to scale that back because it’s not our place, and it’s for the executive branch and the legislative branch to figure that out.”

    The Trump administration has only challenged about one-fifth of the adverse rulings it has received from the lower courts. Adler said Solicitor General John Sauer, who represents the government, is strategically selecting which cases to bring to the high court. 

    “If you go through them, setting Humphrey’s Executor stuff slightly to the side, what they all have in common is that there’s a kind of clear argument that … district courts were a little too aggressive here,” Adler said.

    He acknowledged that some might have a different view, that the Trump administration has been “too muscular” and that court intervention is a necessary check.

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TORPEDOES SCOTUS WITH EMERGENCY REQUESTS AND SEES SURPRISING SUCCESS

    Supreme Court of the United States

    The Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C. (Valerie Plesch/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    The emergency docket, sometimes known as the shadow or interim docket, allows the Trump administration or plaintiffs to ask the Supreme Court to quickly intervene in lawsuits and temporarily pause lower court rulings. The process can take a couple of days, weeks or months, and is viewed as a much speedier, albeit temporary, way to secure court relief than when the high court fully considers the merits of a case, which can include a long briefing schedule and oral arguments.

    The Supreme Court’s emergency docket this year has been extraordinarily active. Attorney Kannon Shanmugam, who has argued dozens of cases before the high court, said Trump’s high volume of executive actions is partly the reason for that.

    “[An increase in emergency motions] coincides with the rise of executive orders and other forms of unilateral executive action really as the primary form of lawmaking in our country with the disappearance of Congress, and that has posed enormous challenges for the court,” Shanmugam said during the panel.

    Through the emergency docket, the Supreme Court has greenlit Trump’s mass firings of career employees and high-profile terminations of Democratic appointees. It has curtailed nationwide injunctions and cleared the way for controversial deportations and immigration stops. The high court has said the government can, for now, withhold billions of dollars in foreign aid and discharge transgender service members from the military.

    In other instances, parties on both sides have construed Supreme Court outcomes as wins.

    In one such order, the Supreme Court said the Trump administration must attempt to return Salvadoran migrant Kilmar Abrego Garcia, whom the government admitted in court to improperly deporting to a Salvadoran prison. But at the same time, the high court noted that district court judges must also be deferential to the executive branch’s authority over foreign policy.

    Similarly, the high court said the administration must allow deportees under the Alien Enemies Act a reasonable chance to fight their removal through habeas corpus petitions. The justices have not yet weighed in on the merits of Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act, one of his most aggressive deportation tactics, which the president employed to swiftly remove alleged Tren de Aragua members.

    KAVANAUGH CITES 3 PRESIDENTS IN EXPLAINING SUPREME COURT’S BALLOONING EMERGENCY DOCKET

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife, Jennifer, speak to supporters outside of an ICE Field Office in Baltimore, Maryland. (Breanne Deppisch/Fox News Digital)

    Kilmar Abrego Garcia and his wife, Jennifer, speak to supporters outside of an ICE Field Office in Baltimore. (Fox News Digital/Breanne Deppisch)

    Conservative lawyer Carrie Severino, president of the legal watchdog JCN, told Fox News Digital one criterion the Supreme Court considers when making fast decisions is whether parties are at risk of irreparable harm.

    As an example, Severino pointed to the Supreme Court recently allowing Trump to fire Biden-appointed FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter, a case that the high court is now using as a vehicle to revisit in the coming months the 90-year precedent set by Humphrey’s Executor v. United States.

    Severino said, “If one assumes, ‘Okay, if Trump’s right,’ then this is a serious burden on the government to have a good chunk of their four years being taken up with not being able to actually staff the government as they want to. If Trump’s wrong, then Commissioner Slaughter should have been in that position, and they can remedy that by providing her back pay.”

    “When you’re balancing those types of harms, this is the kind of case where the government’s going to have a leg up,” Severino said.

    In a small defeat for Trump on Wednesday, the Supreme Court declined to allow the president to fire Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook and instead said it would hear her case in January. The move was a deviation from the court’s typical posture and underscored its unique view on the Federal Reserve compared with other agencies.

    The Supreme Court’s majority has often split along ideological lines and offered little reason for its emergency decisions. This differs from final orders from the court, which can be lengthy and include numerous concurring opinions and dissents.

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    Attorney Benjamin Mizer, who served as a top DOJ official during the Biden administration, cautioned during the panel that the Supreme Court could reverse its shadow docket positions down the road.

    “As cases reach the court on the merits, we shouldn’t presume that the administration will win them all,” Mizer said.

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