Wednesday, March 6, 2024

COMMON DREAMS: Top News: 'Finish the Problem,' Says Trump Endorsing Gaza Genocide



Wednesday, March 6, 2024

■ Today's Top News 


SEC Accused of Bending to Industry Pressure by Omitting Key Measure in New Climate Rule

"The SEC's decision to bow to industry pressure against comprehensive climate disclosure requirements is a disservice to both the planet and investors," said one expert.

By Thor Benson



'Unconscionable': Biden Has Approved 100+ Arms Sales to Israel in Just Five Months

"When people ask, 'What do you want Joe Biden to do?' the answer is: Stop making these weapons deals," said one campaigner.

By Jake Johnson



Trump's Fascist Consolidation of GOP Advances as Haley Quits, McConnell Endorses

U.S. voters, said one campaigner, now have a choice "between an aspiring dictator who is running for office so that he can escape accountability and punish his political enemies, and a leader who will protect our democracy."

By Jessica Corbett



Bullets Found at Gaza Flour Massacre Site Belie Israel's 'Stampede' Claim

A preliminary investigation by Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor affirmed that bullets that killed and wounded hundreds of Palestinians waiting for food aid are the same type fired by Israeli troops' guns.

By Brett Wilkins



Planet-Warming Emissions Would Soar If Trump Wins Second Term: Study

New research suggests Trump's plans for another four years in the White House could doom the climate.

By Thor Benson



'Finish the Problem': Presumptive GOP Nominee Trump Endorses Gaza Genocide

One commentator argued that while President Joe Biden has "bent over backward to support Israel," Donald Trump would "be even worse."

By Jake Johnson


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■ More News


Following French Victory, Spain's Left Wants to Enshrine Abortion Rights in Constitution


In Private Meeting, Sanders Urged Biden to Embrace FDR-Style Agenda


GOP Budget Called a Plan to 'Sell Out' Families to 'Line the Pockets of the Ultra-Rich' 
"With trillions of dollars in devastating cuts that will force families to spend more on everything from groceries to healthcare, this budget is the last thing Americans need," said Democratic Rep. Brendan Boyle.

House Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a budget blueprint for next fiscal year that, while light on specifics, expresses the party's support for Medicaid work requirements and a fiscal commission for Social Security and Medicare—which critics say is a thinly veiled ploy to slash the key programs.

Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee, said in a statement that "if you've been waiting for a plan to sell out American families to line the pockets of the ultra-rich, then look no further."

"With trillions of dollars in devastating cuts that will force families to spend more on everything from groceries to healthcare, this budget is the last thing Americans need," said Boyle. "House Republicans have no shortage of unfinished work they should be focused on right now—but they've once again made it clear that their top priority is finding new ways to attack working- and middle-class families."

Republicans released their Fiscal Year 2025 budget resolution ahead of a House Budget Committee mark-up hearing set for Thursday. Bloombergnoted that it is "unusual" for lawmakers to begin crafting a budget framework before the White House outlines its budget proposal for the coming fiscal year, which President Joe Biden is set to do next week.

Congressional appropriators are still working on government funding bills for the current fiscal year that have been delayed for months due to Republicans' push for aggressive cuts.

"A vote for the GOP budget is a vote to cut Social Security and Medicare."

The GOP's Fiscal Year 2025 plan does not yet include specific funding levels, but it makes a number of policy statements indicating that the party intends to pursue steep spending reductions and other longstanding priorities.

For example, the resolution calls on Congress to enact legislation "implementing work requirements into the Medicaid program," despite research and state-level experiments showing that work mandates do virtually nothing to boost employment while depriving many people of health coverage.

Vox's Dylan Scott noted last year that "Medicaid work requirements are really just spending cuts in disguise."

"The Congressional Budget Office had previously estimated requiring nondisabled, non-elderly childless adults to work in order to receive Medicaid benefits would slash the program's spending by $135 billion over 10 years—largely because more than 2 million people would lose coverage annually for failing to meet the work requirement."

Republican-led states are expected to ramp up their push for Medicaid work requirements if former President Donald Trump wins a second term in November.

The GOP's budget resolution also backs calls for a "fiscal commission," endorsing legislation passed by the House Budget Committee in January.

"This resolution includes a commission designed to slash Social Security and Medicare behind closed doors," Social Security Works said Wednesday in response to the proposal. "A vote for the GOP budget is a vote to cut Social Security and Medicare."

https://www.commondreams.org/news/republican-budget-resolution





What a Leaked US Cable Says About Israel's Looming Assault on Rafah


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■ Opinion


Paul Krugman Remains Blind to Wall Street's War on Workers

What the Nobel Prize-winning economist and prominent columnist fails to see again and again is that many, if not most, rural mass layoffs in the last four decades, are the result of out-and-out greed by corporate interests and the investor class.

By Les Leopold


Would Trump Be One Ounce Better Than Biden on Gaza? He Just Told Us: No.

The former Republican president's position on Gaza is not any different from that of the current president.

By Juan Cole


The World Must Calculate the Real Gaza Death Toll

With virtually no healthcare left, no medications, and infectious diseases spreading especially among infants, children, the infirm, and the elderly, can anybody believe that the fatalities have just gone over 30,000?

By Ralph Nader


VIEW ALL OPINION


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