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Reporter’s Notebook: GOP clash over ‘skinny’ vs ‘obese’ DHS bill as Trump agenda looms
If it’s up to top Senate GOP leaders, the next budget reconciliation package to finally fund the Department of Homeland Security will be on a fiscal cocktail of Wegovy and Ozempic.
But other Republicans want this measure to be a high-calorie, political feast. Pop-Tarts, Sour Cream and Onion potato chips from Pringles, topped with Reese’s Pieces and a side of Häagen-Dazs chocolate peanut butter ice cream. All washed down with an entire two-liter of Mountain Dew.
Stymied by Democrats — and in many cases themselves — congressional Republicans are now teeing up a reconciliation package to end the two-month-long DHS funding stalemate. By using budget reconciliation as a tool, Republicans can ignore Democrats, sidestep a Senate filibuster and prospectively pass the bill on their own.
If they all stick together.
GOP INFIGHTING REPLACES CLASH WITH DEMS, DERAILS PATH TO END HISTORIC DHS SHUTDOWN
There’s a push by Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., to prep a bill as svelte as possible, since DHS has been penniless for so long.
“We’re going to move quickly, decisively, and hopefully in a very focused way,” said Thune.
This is why Republicans call this a “skinny” bill, devoted to ending the shutdown.
“We want to fund ICE and Border Patrol and maybe a few other things. But very narrow. Very focused,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.
But not everyone in the Senate Republican Conference is on parliamentary Weight Watchers.
Some want to stuff the reconciliation bill with tens of billions of dollars to cover the cost of the war in Iran. Others want to include the touchstone of Trump’s legislative agenda, the SAVE America Act. It requires proof of citizenship in order to vote. There’s a push to tack on farm aid. Others are arguing for disaster relief.
HOUSE CONSERVATIVES RAGE AGAINST SENATE DHS SHUTDOWN DEAL
“It doesn’t need to be skinny. We need to do the SAVE America Act. We need to fund the war. We need to do whatever President Trump needs to do with DHS and TSA,” said Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., on Fox Business. “Let’s put as much stuff in there as we can get now.”
But loading up the bill could slow it down. Especially when time is of the essence.
“The broader you make this, the longer it’s going to take to pass the bill,” yours truly pointed out to Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn.
“That’s a fair assumption,” replied Hagerty. “But we have some critical needs as well. We’re going to have to debate all of this and decide exactly how far we’re going to go. Speed is critical.”
I asked Thune if he was “worried” that some Republican senators may ask to dump “other things” into the legislation.
“Well, they could,” replied Thune. “We have members who want other things. I mean, I want other things. But obviously we have a specific mission and purpose here.”
Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., opined on what skinny or fat means for the fate of the legislation.
“If John [Thune] holds firm, then the bill will remain skinny. If he doesn’t, it’ll jeopardize the bill being passed,” said Kennedy. “If he starts making deals, there will be four or five senators who take a run at it to try to have their stuff included. If he starts making deals to get their votes, it’ll be a huge mistake because you’re talking to one senator, and he is going to insist that [his] stuff be included, too.”
Kennedy called adding legislative sweeteners — increasing the political caloric count — into the legislation to convince reluctant senators to vote yes would be “a huge mistake.” Kennedy noted that “this skinny bill is going to become obese very quickly.”
So adding Iran dollars into the bill is one option, but some Republicans are reluctant to spend any more money on Iran until they get some answers about what’s next.
“It’s going to be very difficult to get my support for any funding, or any additional resources from Congress until I have a clear, articulated strategy, how this is going to be ramping down over the next 60 or 30 to 35 days. Or, if it’s going to be escalated,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C. “We need a clearly articulated plan if we’re going to be there for the long term.”
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Other Republicans are willing to give the administration some leeway on Iran.
“We can’t control the time it’s going to take to accomplish the mission. So the mission should be the goal. Not the time it takes to accomplish the goal. We’re in it. We need to be in it to win it,” said Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo. “Look at Vietnam. The reason we lost is because that war was being managed by LBJ from the White House. And when the White House tries to manage the military and call the shots and make the day-to-day decisions, we fail.”
This is an apples-and-oranges question, but some Republicans are not-so-quietly getting skittish about how long the U.S. will be on the hook for the war. Especially as the conflict creeps toward the 60-day mark later this month.
“I think it will be solved by then,” said a confident Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio.
But even if the battle is over, it’s probable the U.S. would still maintain military assets in the region. There’s a running cost on that. That bill will come due at some point. And that’s why this reconciliation bill is such a ripe target for additional items like Iran war funding.
But Republicans are already promising an additional reconciliation bill. If the first bill remains lean, GOPers will inevitably push to stash whatever they can in the later package. Still, that’s hard. And with DHS unfunded for so long, that’s why Thune is trained just on approving DHS money.
But reconciliation bills are complex. The House and Senate consumed the entire period from early February through July 3 last year just to pass the One Big, Beautiful Bill Act. Thune and the president want the DHS funding bill wrapped up in the next few weeks. So a third bill?
“Those who tell us that we’re going to have a third reconciliation bill have been smoking the devil’s lettuce. We will never have a third reconciliation bill,” said Kennedy. “This is the last major piece of legislation that we will likely pass until the midterms. There’s a feeling which I share among the Senate caucus that this is the last train leaving the station. We had better get all our cargo aboard. Now.”
Most diets fail. It’s not a question of willpower. But sometimes dieting is a challenge the deeper you get into it.
The House and Senate are just beginning the current effort to pass the reconciliation bill for DHS funding. It may start out slender, but maintenance is hard.
Here’s something else working against lawmakers: history.
Congress is used to piling lots of things into “must-pass” bills. That’s where the extra parliamentary pounds come from.
Diets often succeed because someone makes lifestyle changes. Will Congress make a “lifestyle change” and pass a reconciliation that only ends the DHS shutdown?
It’s a weighty question.
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The WNBA’s Wings can’t shield Paige Bueckers, Azzi Fudd from relationship questions forever
The biggest storyline coming out of Monday night’s WNBA Draft wasn’t just that the Dallas Wings landed another No. 1 overall pick in Azzi Fudd. It was that Fudd, a now-former star at Connecticut, is dating the Wings’ superstar franchise player, Paige Bueckers, who also played at Connecticut.
“Pazzi” (as fans affectionately call the couple) has reunited.
And because it’s getting so much attention, it also opened the door for a lot of people — many of whom don’t really follow women’s basketball — to jump in with takes that don’t hold up.
The biggest one is that Dallas took Fudd No. 1 just because of her relationship with Bueckers.
That’s just not true.
Fudd was going to be a top pick no matter who had the No. 1 selection. You don’t put together a college career like she did — one of the most efficient scorers in UConn history, nearly 50/45/95 shooting splits, Final Four Most Outstanding Player — and suddenly become a fraud because of who you’re dating.
She also fits perfectly into the Wings’ roster based on their position needs.
Dallas already has Arike Ogunbowale and Paige Bueckers running the offense, so what they really need around them is space. Fudd gives them exactly that. She’s one of the best off-ball shooters to come into the league in a long time.
After adding Alanna Smith and Jessica Shepard in free agency, they didn’t need a big.
And sure, the chemistry with Bueckers is a bonus.
Now, all that said, we still need to talk about what happened at Fudd’s introductory press conference on Thursday. Because that’s when things got awkward.
A reporter asked Fudd a pretty reasonable question.
“Paige announced last year on TikTok that y’all were a couple,” the reporter said. “And I’m wondering if that’s still the case, and if so, if y’all have talked to other couples in the league about how they negotiate that dynamic as pro teammates?”
Before Fudd could answer, Wings PR stepped in.
“I understand why you have to ask that question, but we’re going to respectfully decline from commenting on our players’ personal lives,” the rep said.
Look, I understand the instinct there. Teams want to protect their players, and generally speaking, an athlete’s dating life isn’t something that needs to be dissected in a press conference.
But when your significant other is also your franchise player and starting backcourt partner, it’s a story.
And the question wasn’t intrusive or inappropriate, either. The reporter wasn’t fishing for gossip. He was asking about how two players might navigate being both teammates and partners at the highest level.
And by shutting it down immediately, the Wings actually made it a bigger deal than it needed to be.
If Fudd answers that question herself, gives a quick, polished response and pivots back to basketball, it probably doesn’t go anywhere. Address it once, and we can all move on.
Instead, the PR intervention became the story. And it’s all over our news feeds.
Realistically, Fudd could have handled that in about 10 seconds.
We’re both professionals. I’m really excited to share the court with Paige again. We won a national championship together in 2025. Let’s run it back here in Dallas.
Easy.
And that’s where the Wings might need to adjust their approach, because this isn’t something they’re going to be able to shield their players from forever.
This relationship is public. We all already know about it. Fudd and Bueckers attended Monday’s draft arm-in-arm, for goodness’ sake.
Of course, you don’t have to make it the focal point of every media session, but trying to completely shut it down isn’t realistic, either. Especially as the league continues to grow.
With the new CBA bringing in bigger salaries and more visibility, these players are stepping into a much larger spotlight. And with that spotlight comes more coverage, more interest, and yes, occasionally questions that might sometimes be a little uncomfortable.
That’s part of the deal.
The Wings don’t need to lean into this romantic relationship, and they don’t need to make it a sideshow. But letting their players handle those moments naturally would probably go a lot further than trying to shut them down entirely.
Because right now, that approach is making it look like a scandal when it’s not.
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Daughter of missing American woman touches down in Bahamas, slams stepdad after he fled amid investigation
The daughter of a woman who remains missing in the Bahamas lashed out against her stepfather after arriving on Great Abaco Island Thursday.
Karli Aylesworth previously slammed her stepfather, Brian Hooker, who was the last person to see her mother, Lynette Hooker, alive on April 4. Brian said Lynette fell overboard from their dinghy around 7:30 p.m. as the pair motored toward their sailboat, which was anchored off Elbow Key.
Brian was arrested by the Royal Bahamas Police Force April 8 and spent five days behind bars while police investigated Lynette’s disappearance. He was released Monday night without being charged with a crime.
On Tuesday morning, he told several news outlets he would remain in the island nation to search for Lynette but jetted off Wednesday for the United States, landing in Atlanta in mid-afternoon, a source familiar with the matter told Fox News Digital.
COAST GUARD OPENS CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION INTO MISSING WOMAN LAST SEEN IN BAHAMAS
“I think it shows his character. He somehow lost my mom at sea and cries on camera saying he’ll never stop searching, then leaves the next day,” Aylesworth told the New York Post upon her arrival to the town of Marsh Harbour, close to where her mother went missing.
She deplaned at the tiny Leonard Thompson International Airport in Marsh Harbour with her boyfriend, Steve Hansen. They were reportedly met by a uniformed police officer before taking off in a taxi.
Hooker’s attorney, Terrel Butler, said he was going to visit Hooker’s mother.
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“Following his release from custody without charge, Mr. Hooker is now facing another emergency. In addition to the trauma of his wife of 25 years being missing, Mr. Hooker has received urgent word of his mother’s grave illness,” Butler told NBC News.
“He has traveled to [the] United States of America to be at her bedside during this critical time.”
After her mother’s disappearance, Aylesworth told Fox News Digital she was aware of “prior issues” with Brian’s behavior.
“There have been prior issues brought to my attention, which may be important for any thorough investigation. If this truly was an accident, I can understand and live with it,” Aylesworth said. “However, there needs to be an intensive review of the facts and circumstances of this tragic incident before that can be determined.”
Aylesworth said she has been “privy to very little information,” adding her “sole concern is to find out what happened to my mother and make sure a full and complete investigation is performed into her disappearance.”
She also told “Fox and Friends” that something “doesn’t add up” with her mother’s disappearance, and accused Brian of having a “history of domestic violence” and anger issues.
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Meanwhile, Bahamian police said their search for Lynette was coming to an end as early as Thursday after analyzing “tide, drift and wind” and deciding there was nowhere else to look. A U.S. Coast Guard investigation remains ongoing.
Brian has maintained he had nothing to do with Lynette’s disappearance and that it was purely an accident driven by windy conditions and choppy seas.
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Before he was jailed, he said he was “heartbroken” over Lynette’s disappearance.
“I am heartbroken over the recent boat accident in unpredictable seas and high winds that caused my beloved Lynette to fall from our small dinghy near Elbow Cay in the Bahamas,” he wrote.
“Despite desperate attempts to reach her, the winds and currents drove us further apart. We continue to search for her, and that is my sole focus.”
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Left-wing host blasts AOC as ‘weak,’ says she only engages critics who are 100% friendly
Ana Kasparian said in a Friday episode of “The Young Turks” that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) showed “a devastating level of weakness” in past votes related to Israel, following a public exchange between the two on social media.
“I’m sick of AOC being incredibly weak on things that she shouldn’t be weak on,” Kasparian said. “Especially at a time when overwhelmingly Democratic voters are against what Israel is doing.”
Kasparian’s remarks came during a segment in which she walked through a recent interaction with Ocasio-Cortez on X, after responding critically to the congresswoman’s post about a disrupted plot targeting Palestinian activist Nerdeen Kiswani.
JOHN FETTERMAN SLAMS ANTI-ISRAEL ‘ROT’ IN DEMOCRATIC PARTY, REJECTS AOC CLAIMS OF GAZA ‘GENOCIDE’
Kasparian said her response to Ocasio-Cortez was intentionally sharp and rooted in frustration over what she described as inconsistency on foreign policy votes.
“You should vote to send Israel more money for weapons,” Kasparian said, describing her reply as sarcastic. “Obviously I’m being sarcastic there.”
The segment then shifted to Ocasio-Cortez’s past voting record, which Kasparian argued reflects a pattern of backing away from stronger opposition under pressure.
“No one can force you to change your vote,” Kasparian said. “You changed your vote because you got a little bit of pressure and you didn’t like the pressure.”
JOHN FETTERMAN CALLS OUT AOC’S ‘CLUELESS’ ANTI-ISRAEL COMMENTS IN MUNICH
Kasparian also pointed to a more recent vote in which Ocasio-Cortez opposed an amendment to cut military aid to Israel, arguing that even defensive funding should not be supported.
“She voted against an amendment to cut military aid to Israel,” Kasparian said. “I don’t care. Money is fungible.”
Kasparian framed her criticism around what she described as a failure to follow through on the progressive expectations that helped elect Ocasio-Cortez.
KEVIN O’LEARY BATTLES CNN PANEL OVER AOC FIASCO IN MUNICH, SAYS OTHERS ARE ‘NUTS’
“The whole reason why she was elected in the first place was to transform the Democratic Party,” Kasparian said. “That is the opposite of what you got elected to do.”
She contrasted Ocasio-Cortez’s public messaging with her voting decisions in Congress.
“I love your fiery speeches. They’re great. They don’t do anything though,” Kasparian said.
“When push comes to shove and you have an opportunity to show us that you’re going to do something with your vote, in the very least, you cave.”
Kasparian concluded by reiterating that her criticism is rooted in disappointment rather than opposition, while maintaining that Ocasio-Cortez’s voting record speaks for itself.
“That was a big red flag,” she said. “A devastating sign of weakness.”
Fox News Digital reached out to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for comment but did not immediately hear back.
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