|
The states petitioned a federal court days after the Agriculture Dept. said it would not take emergency steps to provide aid during the government shutdown.
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
A report released Tuesday calls for further DOJ investigation into the Biden administration.
|
|
(Second column, 1st story, link)
Related stories: Food banks preparing for surge... RIOTS GROWING CONCERN... Flight delays near 7,000 as shutdown continues... FAA warns of ground stops...
Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron
| RELATED ARTICLES | | |
|
(Second column, 6th story, link)
Related stories: TRUMP ADMIN ANNOUNCES NO FOOD STAMPS ON NOV 1... Food banks preparing for surge... RIOTS GROWING CONCERN... Flight delays near 7,000 as shutdown continues... FAA warns of ground stops... MTG: My Party Won't Tell Me Health Care Plan...
|
|
More than 1.4 million federal employees missed their first full paychecks on Friday as the government shutdown enters its fifth week. Meanwhile, the Department of Agriculture warns that food aid to 42 million people could be cut off starting November 1, as the Trump administration refuses to use a $5 billion contingency fund to maintain SNAP, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, popularly known as food stamps.
Gina Plata-Nino from the Food Research and Action Center says the loss of SNAP benefits will have cascading impacts as credit card debt soars, rent payments are delayed and food banks get overrun. "We are going to see a decrease in people's well-being," says Plata-Nino.
|
|
Secretary of State Marco Rubio is the latest top U.S. official to visit Israel as part of a push to maintain the Gaza ceasefire. Reports suggest the Trump administration is worried about Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu undermining the agreement, with the U.S. visits dubbed "Bibi-sitting" missions to prevent any sabotage. Meanwhile, lawmakers in the Knesset have advanced a bill to apply Israeli sovereignty to all illegal settlements in the occupied West Bank — a move that would effectively annex the territory and kill already dim hopes for a future Palestinian state on that land.
For more on the state of the Gaza ceasefire and the future of Palestine, we speak with Robert Malley, co-author with Hussein Agha of the new book Tomorrow Is Yesterday: Life, Death, and the Pursuit of Peace in Israel/Palestine. Malley is a veteran negotiator involved in previous U.S.-backed peace talks between Israel and Palestinian leadership. He says despite the many flaws in the Trump plan, including "deciding everything for Palestinians without Palestinians having a voice," it has at least halted the worst of the violence. He also notes the "double standard" in how all U.S. administrations have dealt with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as "the search for a two-state solution became a gimmick" while the U.S. allowed Israel to entrench its occupation.
|
|
Judge April M. Perry said the Trump administration had not established that sending in troops over the governor's objection was legally justified. An appeal is likely.
|
|