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WNBA lockout looms closer after player vote authorizes strike
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Honduras begins partial vote recount in Trump-dominated election
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Nike shares slump as China struggles continue
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Hundreds swim, float at Bondi Beach to honour shooting victims
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Crunch time for EU leaders on tapping Russian assets for Ukraine
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Pope replaces New York's pro-Trump Cardinal with pro-migrant Chicagoan
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Trump orders marijuana reclassified as less dangerous drug
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Rams ace Nacua apologizes over 'antisemitic' gesture furor
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McIlroy wins BBC sports personality award for 2025 heroics
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Napoli beat Milan in Italian Super Cup semi-final
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Violence erupts in Bangladesh after wounded youth leader dies
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EU-Mercosur deal delayed as farmers stage Brussels show of force
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US hosting new Gaza talks to push next phase of deal
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Chicago Bears mulling Indiana home over public funding standoff
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Trump renames Kennedy arts center after himself
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Trump rebrands housing supplement as $1,776 bonuses for US troops
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Harrison Ford to get lifetime acting award
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Trump health chief seeks to bar trans youth from gender-affirming care
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Argentine unions in the street over Milei labor reforms
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Trump signs order reclassifying marijuana as less dangerous
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Famed Kennedy arts center to be renamed 'Trump-Kennedy Center'
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US accuses S.Africa of harassing US officials working with Afrikaners
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Brazil open to EU-Mercosur deal delay as farmers protest in Brussels
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Wounded Bangladesh youth leader dies in Singapore hospital
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New photo dump fuels Capitol Hill push on Epstein files release
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Brazil, Mexico seek to defuse US-Venezuela crisis
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Assange files complaint against Nobel Foundation over Machado win
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Private donors pledge $1 bn for CERN particle accelerator
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Russian court orders Austrian bank Raiffeisen to pay compensation
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US, Qatar, Turkey, Egypt to hold Gaza talks in Miami
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Lula open to mediate between US, Venezuela to 'avoid armed conflict'
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Brussels farmer protest turns ugly as EU-Mercosur deal teeters
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US imposes sanctions on two more ICC judges for Israel probe
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US accuses S. Africa of harassing US officials working with Afrikaners
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ECB holds rates as Lagarde stresses heightened uncertainty
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Trump Media announces merger with fusion power company
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Stocks rise as US inflation cools, tech stocks bounce
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Zelensky presses EU to tap Russian assets at crunch summit
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Pope replaces New York's Cardinal Dolan with pro-migrant bishop
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Odermatt takes foggy downhill for 50th World Cup win
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France exonerates women convicted over abortions before legalisation
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UK teachers to tackle misogyny in classroom
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Historic Afghan cinema torn down for a mall
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US consumer inflation cools unexpectedly in November
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Danish 'ghetto' residents upbeat after EU court ruling
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ECB holds rates but debate swirls over future
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Pope replaces New York's Cardinal Timothy Dolan with little-known bishop
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Bank of England cuts interest rate after UK inflation slides
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Have Iran's authorities given up on the mandatory hijab?
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Spain to buy 100 military helicopters from Airbus
US Republicans close in on make-or-break Trump mega-bill vote
US senators raced towards a final vote Tuesday on President Donald Trump's mammoth domestic policy bill, as Republicans voiced lingering misgivings over deep welfare cuts it proposes and the $3 trillion it will pile onto the national debt.
Republican leaders had struggled to corral support during a record 24-hour "vote-a-rama" amendment session on the Senate floor, as Democrats offered dozens of challenged to the most unpopular aspects of the divisive package.
But Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune voiced tentative confidence mid-morning that he had achieved a breakthrough.
Asked if Republican leaders had a deal to move ahead in the coming hours with a vote on final passage, Thune told reporters: "I believe we do."
"I'm of Scandinavian heritage, so always a bit of a realist," he added. "So we'll see what happens."
Trump's "One Big Beautiful Bill" proposes a $4.5 trillion extension of his first term tax cuts, contentiously offset with $1.2 trillion in cuts mainly to health care coverage for low-income Americans that will leave an estimated 12 million uninsured.
It also rolls back billions of dollars in green energy tax credits while providing a $350 billion infusion for border security and Trump's mass deportation program.
At the White House, the president made clear that the goal remains to sign the package into law by Friday's Independence Day holiday, although he acknowledged that the self-imposed deadline could slip.
"We're going to get there. It's tough.... It's really good for the country, trying to get a lot for everybody. And it's a big bill," he told reporters.
- Trump-Musk fued reignites -
Polls show the bill is among the most unpopular ever considered across multiple demographic, age and income groups, and Democrats hope to leverage public anger ahead of the 2026 midterm elections when they aim to retake the House.
Backed by extensive independent analysis, they say the bill's tax cuts would disproportionately benefit the wealthy at the expense of social safety net programs for the poorest Americans.
"It's bad legislation," Arizona senator Mark Kelly told MSNBC. "If this passes, this is a political gift for Democrats."
A handful of senators in the Republican majority had also threatened to upset the apple cart, echoing Democratic concerns that the bill would add more than $3.3 trillion to the nation's already yawning budget deficits over a decade.
The most high-profile opposition has come from outside Congress, however, in the shape of tech billionaire and estranged former Trump aide Elon Musk, who balked at the bill's debt implications and stripping of clean energy subsidies.
In a dramatic reignition of his feud with Trump, Musk vowed to launch a new political party to challenge lawmakers who campaigned on reduced federal spending only to vote for the bill.
Musk -- whose businesses include rocket company and government contractor SpaceX, which has about $22 billion in federal contracts -- has been campaigning against the bill since quitting as a Trump advisor in May.
A furious Trump on Tuesday said he would consider deporting Musk and ending federal funds for his companies.
"Elon may get more subsidy than any human being in history, by far," Trump posted in a retort on social media, "and without subsidies, Elon would probably have to close up shop and head back home to South Africa."
- Focus on House -
Although the House of Representatives has already passed their own version of the bill, it will have to come back to the lower chamber for a final rubber stamp before it reaches Trump's desk.
House Republicans were watching anxiously from the sidelines to see if their Senate colleagues would adopt changes that would be hard for Speaker Mike Johnson to sell to his lawmakers.
Fiscal hawks in the lower chamber are furious at what they say is $651 billion of extra deficit spending in the Senate's tweaks.
A House vote could come as early as Wednesday but even with full attendance, House Republicans can only afford to lose three votes.
"We're going to pass this bill one way or the other," Johnson told reporters at the Capitol on Monday.
R.Adler--BTB