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House Republicans face deadline to slash foreign aid and public broadcasting – live

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House Republicans face tight deadline to slash foreign aid and public broadcasting

The House of Representatives is expected to vote today on Donald Trump’s $9bn funding cut to public media and to foreign aid, after the Senate delivered a victory for the president when it approved the package last night.

House Republicans were poised to vote in favor of the funding cut package, altered by the Senate this week to exclude cuts of about $400m in funds for a HIV/AIDS prevention program. The vote, scheduled for this evening, could be close. In June, four Republicans joined Democrats to vote against the package, which passed 214-212.

House Republicans are feeling extra pressure now, as Trump’s administration would be forced to spend the money if Congress does not approve the cuts by the end of the week.

The $9bn at stake amounts to roughly one-tenth of one percent of the $6.8tn federal budget. On the package’s approval last night, Senate majority leader John Thune called it a “small, but important step toward fiscal sanity”.

In the 51-48 Senate vote, only two Republicans, Susan Collins from Maine and Lisa Murkowski from Alaska, voted against the funding cut. Both questioned why the legislative body – constitutionally responsible for the power of the purse – was taking direction from the executive branch to slash funding through the so-called “rescissions” package that was passed by the Republican-controlled Congress in March.

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Pam Bondi and Doug Burgum to visit Alcatraz today

Two months after Donald Trump floated the farfetched idea of reopening Alcatraz as a federal prison, his attorney general Pam Bondi and interior secretary Doug Burgum are expected to visit the tourist site today, KQED reports.

Burgum, whose department controls the land, and Bondi, who oversees the Bureau of Prisons, plan to visit the shuttered prison before it opens for the day for tours, Nancy Pelosi’s office confirmed to KQED.

“The planned announcement to reopen Alcatraz as a federal penitentiary is the Trump administration’s stupidest initiative yet,” the California Democratic congresswomen and former House speaker said in a statement.

“Make no mistake: this stupidity is a diversionary tactic to draw attention away from this administration’s cruelest actions yet in their Big, Ugly Law,” she said, referring to Trump’s sweeping tax and spending bill.

The Trump administration cannot simply reopen Alcatraz. Current legislation places the island under the control of the Department of the Interior and designates it as part of a national park. Therefore, a member of Congress would need to propose a bill to change things.

“Should reason not prevail and Republicans bring this absurdity before the Congress, Democrats will use every parliamentary and budgetary tactic available to stop the lunacy,” Pelosi said.

A view of Alcatraz Island, part of the Golden Gate national recreation area, in San Francisco. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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