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Three Big Things

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  • House votes to let Trump's Operation Epic Fury continue in Iran

    The House of Representatives narrowly voted to allow President Donald Trump to continue Operation Epic Fury in Iran on Thursday.

    A bipartisan resolution led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., failed to pass after four Democrats joined most Republicans in sinking it, 212 to 219.

    The legislation was aimed at blocking Trump from using the Armed Forces in the joint U.S.-Israeli operation in Iran, which would likely force the strikes to grind to a halt.

    The Trump administration, as well as the majority of Republicans in Congress, have insisted that the president has acted within his authority so far and are hopeful he will continue to do so.

    But Democrats, along with Massie and Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, are largely skeptical. Both Republicans voted in favor of the measure.

    The Democrats who voted against reining in Trump's war powers include Reps. Jared Golden, D-Maine, Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, and Greg Landsman, D-Ohio.

    "The Ayatollah was not a president. He was a religious leader from a region notorious for radical Islamists and the United States and Israel turned him into a martyr," Massie said during debate on the resolution. "If Congress wants war, then the speaker should hold a vote to declare it."

    Davidson said Wednesday, "The moral hazard posed by a government no longer constrained by our Constitution is a grave threat."

    Other Republican lawmakers said they were concerned that handicapping the operation now could do more harm than good.

    "I think the president is well within his legal authorities to conduct this operation," Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., told Fox News on Tuesday. "I think any effort to stymie that would actually jeopardize our national security and jeopardize our troops." 

    U.S. officials have said their targets remain Iran's military assets, senior leadership, and nuclear capabilities. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth told reporters this week that the operation will have a finite timeline.

    But Democrats are accusing Trump of plunging the U.S. into a seemingly endless conflict while running roughshod over Congress' Article I authority.

    "Donald Trump has taken America to war without authorization, without explanation, without a strategy or an exit plan. Six brave service members have already given the ultimate sacrifice," House Minority Whip Katherine Clark, D-Mass., said on Wednesday.

    Meanwhile,President Trump urged the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the military and the police to lay down their arms Thursday.

    Speaking in the East Room, Trump said, “I'm once again calling on all members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, the military and the police to lay down their arms.”

    “They're only going to be killed. And now is the time to stand up for the Iranian people and help take back your country," Trump warned.

    “You're going to have a chance, after all these years, to take back your country,” he said before asking them to “accept immunity.”

    “You'll be perfectly safe with total immunity,” Trump said before warning they would “face absolutely guaranteed death” if they didn't take the offer up.



    Read more : Trump's Operation Epic Fury gets greenlight as House war powers bill fails | Fox News

  • Lawmakers may change a controversial Alabama tax that sparked multiple lawsuits

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    Alabama lawmakers may tweak how the state doles out revenue from the online sales tax, a move the sponsor of the bill said would be an effort to show good faith in trying to resolve a complex disagreement involving the state, cities, counties, and school boards.

    The flat 8% tax, known as the Simplified Sellers Use Tax, has been collected since 2016 and is a vital and growing source of tax dollars. It generated $851 million in 2024, up 34% in two years.

    Some of Alabama’s largest cities, led by Tuscaloosa, as well as some school systems, filed a lawsuit last year, saying the SSUT was no longer valid. They said they were losing revenue because they said a 2018 U.S. Supreme Court ruling authorized Alabama to collect its regular sales taxes on online sales.

    The Association of County Commissions of Alabama and many smaller municipalities opposed the lawsuit and defended the SSUT as a practical system and critical source of revenue to support law enforcement and other services.

    The plaintiffs voluntarily dropped their lawsuit in February hoping to pursue a legislative fix.

    Sen. Greg Albritton, R-Atmore, chairman of the Senate’s General Fund committee, filed a bill Thursday to make a change he said was agreed to by all sides in the dispute.

    Under current law, 50% of the revenue from the SSUT goes to the state, 30% goes to municipalities to be distributed according to population, and 20% goes to counties to be distributed by population.

    The populations used for those calculations are taken from the 10-year census.

    Albritton’s bill says the population figures used to allocate the money for cities and counties would be updated every five years based on U.S. Census Bureau reports, rather than waiting for the 10-year census.

    Albritton said the parties in the disagreement have been meeting regularly and concurred on the idea Thursday morning.

    “We have some consensus on some matters, but there’s many items to this complicated issue that we have not resolved,” Albritton said.

    “However, we did come to an agreement that we needed to do something in this session if possible.”

    Richard Rush, head of government relations and external affairs for the city of Tuscaloosa, said the city supports Albritton’s bill.

    “Senator Albritton’s bill is a positive step forward and reflects progress toward a constructive partnership on this issue,” Rush said in an email.

    “While this is not a final resolution, it is an important part of the ongoing discussions and helps create a path for continued negotiations.

    “Most importantly, it moves Alabama toward a more accurate distribution model by allowing SSUT allocations to better reflect growth and population changes, rather than relying solely on outdated census figures.”

    Albritton introduced the bill Thursday. He said it still has time to pass, with 11 meeting days remaining in the session.

    “The purpose of this is to show good faith to everybody in the state that we’re working on an issue that’s controversial, that’s difficult, and that we’re doing something in good faith to try to move it forward.”

    Sonny Brasfield, executive director of the Association of County Commissions of Alabama, said counties are not opposed to the bill.

    Brasfield said the ACCA has consistently followed three principles in its approach to the SSUT.

    “We’re opposed to any legislation that dismantles the SSUT system, to any bill that puts the program in constitutional peril, or any bill that reduces essential funding to Alabama’s 67 counties,” Brasfield said.

    “So with that said, this bill introduced today doesn’t do any of those things. And so we are, we’re not opposed to that legislation.”

    Brasfield the change would also be consistent with a provision in the Rebuild Alabama Act, which passed in 2019 and increased the state gas tax for the first time since 1992 to fund road construction and maintenance.

    Brasfield said that law based fuel tax revenue distribution on population adjustments made every five years, as Albritton’s bill proposes for the SSUT.

    Lawmakers return on Tuesday.


    Read More : Lawmakers may change a controversial Alabama tax that sparked multiple lawsuits - al.com

  • Trump Ousts Kristi Noem From DHS

    President Donald Trump fired Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem Thursday — making her the first cabinet official removed during Trump’s second term.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, the president had already been frustrated for weeks with what he saw as infighting and turmoil inside the Department of Homeland Security. But things came to a head during congressional hearings this week, when Noem told lawmakers that Trump had approved a controversial $220-million advertising campaign promoting immigration enforcement.

    Those ads — which featured Noem herself urging people living in the U.S. illegally to self-deport — had already been criticized as overly self-promotional. In one spot, Noem appears on horseback in front of Mount Rushmore wearing a cowboy hat.

    During Tuesday’s Senate hearing, Louisiana Senator John Kennedy openly questioned the campaign, saying it seemed more effective at boosting Noem’s name recognition than advancing policy. And when Noem insisted the president had personally approved the ads, that reportedly infuriated Trump — who told advisers he had never signed off on the campaign.

    That night, a last-minute effort by Noem’s top adviser Corey Lewandowski to calm things down failed during a short meeting at the White House. Trump made his decision quickly: she was out.

    The president fired Noem in a phone call just minutes before she was scheduled to appear at a law-enforcement event in Nashville.

    Despite the firing, Trump quickly announced a new role for her — naming Noem a special envoy for what the administration calls the “Shield of the Americas,” a security initiative expected to be formally rolled out in Florida this weekend.

    But the fallout from her time at Homeland Security is still unfolding.

    Noem’s tenure had already been under intense scrutiny following two controversial federal agent shootings during an immigration operation earlier this year. Lawmakers from both parties also grilled her this week over spending decisions, including contracts tied to a $200-million ad campaign that’s now under review by the department’s inspector general.

    Inside DHS, frustration with Noem’s leadership had reportedly been building for months. Several senior officials — including border adviser Tom Homan — had clashed with her over policy and management decisions.

    Now, the president has tapped Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin as his pick to replace her. Mullin told reporters on Capitol Hill he only learned about the nomination shortly before it became public.

    For now, the Department of Homeland Security faces another leadership transition — and questions about how dramatically its direction could change in the months ahead.

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