US Political News and Trump’s China visit

Senate blocks massive funding bill, with critical talks underway to avoid government shutdown​

Morgan Rimmer
Ted Barrett


The US Capitol in Washington, DC, on January 29.


The US Capitol in Washington, DC, on January 29.
Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Bipartisan senators blocked a massive spending bill Thursday, as eleventh-hour talks continue to avoid a costly partial government shutdown that looms at the week’s end.

All Democrats, who are pushing to force changes to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement policies in the wake of Alex Pretti’s fatal encounter with federal agents in Minneapolis, voted not to advance the six-bill funding package.

Instead, they are demanding that Republicans and the White House agree to separate funding for the Department of Homeland Security, which houses ICE, from the rest of the package so it can be renegotiated.

Seven conservatives joined Democrats in keeping the package from moving forward in a 45-55 vote. Senate Majority Leader John Thune changed his vote to “no,” to be able to bring the package up for a later vote.
 

Man accused of spray attack on Rep. Ilhan Omar charged with assault​


From CNN's Chris Boyette and Holmes Lybrand


A man is tackled after spraying an unknown substance at Rep. Ilhan Omar during a town hall she was hosting in Minneapolis, Tuesday.


A man is tackled after spraying an unknown substance at Rep. Ilhan Omar during a town hall she was hosting in Minneapolis, Tuesday.
Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty Images


A man accused of using a syringe to spray Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar with apple cider vinegar during a town hall in Minneapolis Tuesday has been charged with assault, according to a criminal complaint made public today.

Anthony J. Kazmierczak, 55, is alleged to have “forcibly assaulted, opposed, impeded, intimidated and officer and employee of the United States,” said a federal criminal complaint filed Wednesday in the US District Court of Minnesota.

The affidavit cites video posted to social media of the attack, saying it shows Kazmierczak quickly approaching Omar and spraying the apple cider vinegar just after she called on the Department of Homeland Security Secretary, Kristi Noem to resign.

As Kazmierczak walked away, it looks like he said, “She’s not resigning. You’re splitting Minnesotans apart,” according to the affidavit.

Omar was not injured in the attack, but authorities pointed out that Kazmierczak has shown animosity torward her in the past.

The affidavit said an unnamed acquaintance of Kazmierczak told investigators they were once on a phone call with him when he said someone should kill Omar.

The court document also featured a drawing Kazmierczak allegedly posted on his Facebook page criticizing the congresswoman.

The progressive lawmaker has been the subject of Republican attacks and scrutiny, as President Donald Trump’s administration focuses its attention on Minneapolis, the city she represents.

Omar has condemned federal immigration agents’ “terrorizing” tactics and “reckless and lawless” actions in the city and called on Noem to resign or be impeached.

Hennepin County jail records indicate Kazmierczak was released from local custody today, signaling his transfer to federal authorities.

No lawyer was listed in court documents as representing Kazmierczak.
 
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Schumer will act as if he's gotten a big win. At the end of the day, DHS will receive their funding. There is no choice. Democrats were in full support of creating DHS following 9/11.
 
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They separate the main bill and DHS funding so they can pass the main bill (Which still hasn't been voted on, it will be on Friday). DHS will be temporarily funded for 2 weeks, and the negotiations continue
 
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This theory has not crossed my mind but now....

Btw that pic is of DNI Chief Tulsi Gabbard and many are wondering why She showed up at Georgia during FBI raid of election center.
 

US protesters begin nationwide strike as DOJ launches Pretti killing probe​

Protesters call for ‘no work, no school, no shopping’ in response to Trump’s deadly immigration enforcement crackdown.

People gather for a protest outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, Friday, Jan. 30, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Adam Gray)

People gather for a protest outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis, Minnesota [Adam Gray/The Associated Press]

ByJoseph Stepanskyand News Agencies
Published On 30 Jan 202630 Jan 2026
Protesters in the United States have started a nationwide “no work, no school, no shopping” strike in response to the President Donald Trump administration’s deportation drive.

The strike on Friday, organised by an array of activist groups, comes in the wake of the killing of two US citizens in Minnesota by immigration enforcement agents this month, building on a state-wide strike held last week.
On Friday, the US Department of Justice announced it would open a civil rights probe into the killing of 37-year-old Alex Pretti by border patrol agents on January 24.

However, it has still not moved to investigate possible rights violations of 37-year-old Renee Nicole Good in her fatal shooting by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent on January 7.

United States Representative Ilhan Omar, who represents Minneapolis, was among the elected officials promoting Friday’s strike.

“Solidarity with every single person participating in today’s general strike against ICE’s terror campaign,” Omar wrote on X.

“You’re changing the world,” she said.

Civil rights probe​

The killings of Good and Pretti followed the Trump administration’s surge of immigration agents to Minnesota to specifically target alleged fraud in the Somali American community.

The deployment came amid a wider deportation drive that observers say has seen immigration agents use dragnet techniques to reach dramatically increased detention quotas.

Earlier this week, border security chief Tom Homan, officially dubbed the “border czar” by the White House, pledged that enforcement operations would continue in the state, but said increased cooperation with local officials could lead to a “drawdown”.

On Friday, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche confirmed that the agency was conducting a civil rights investigation into Pretti’s killing, saying “we’re looking at everything that would shed light on what happened that day and in the days and weeks leading up to what happened”.

strike
A sign at a gift shop indicates it is closed for the general strike in Portland, Maine [Robert F Bukaty/The Associated Press]
The statement came as Trump administration officials, many of whom had initially falsely claimed that Pretti had brandished a gun at immigration agents before he was fatally shot, confirmed the FBI would take over the investigation of the shooting from the Department of Homeland Security.

Blanche did not give further details as to why the department was not also opening a civil rights probe into Good’s killing, saying only that the division does not get involved in every law enforcement shooting and that there have to be circumstances that “warrant an investigation”.

Trump officials had immediately labelled Good a “domestic terrorist” who was trying to run over an ICE agent when she was fatally shot. Video of analyses of the killing indicated that Good was trying to drive away from the officer when she was killed.

Federal authorities have barred local and state authorities from conducting their own independent investigations into the killings.

‘Dissent is democratic’​

On Friday, protesters gathered at Howard University in Washington, DC, where they planned to march to the White House.

“I think that it just goes to show how many people are against this, and how this is jeopardising our country,” one student told Al Jazeera.

“I think us all coming together and speaking out against this shows our government that we are not OK with this, and we won’t let it slide,” she added.

Arizona and Colorado, meanwhile, were among states where schools were cancelled in anticipation of mass absences. Dozens of students walked out of morning classes at Groves High School in Birmingham, Michigan.

“We’re here to protest ICE and what they’re doing all over the country, especially in Minnesota,” Logan Albritton, a 17-year-old senior, told the Associated Press news agency. “It’s not right to treat our neighbours and our fellow Americans this way.”

Protests were also planned in major cities like Atlanta, Georgia and Portland, Oregon, where the mayor, Mark Dion, urged people to show their discontent.

“Dissent is Democratic. Dissent is American. It’s the cornerstone of our democracy,” Dion said.


This has the same vibes as the George Floyd killing and the BLM protests.
 
Ice is already funded until 2029 the demorats need a desperate win.
That's why I have trust issues and think you are not an American at all, this is what a traditional overseas American troll would say from common talking points as they know F all about US politics.

The OBBB is a Budget Reconciliation Bill; it DOES NOT require a Senate Supermajority to pass (JD Vance broke the tie with 51 to 50 to pass that bill), while the bill currently in Congress is a Budget Appropriation bill, which requires 60 senators to pass. That's why Trump is looking at the Democrats to support this.

One is for reserving a budget, and the other is for allocating the budget. Without this Appropriation Bill to pass, DHS gets nothing of the 170 billion Congress reserved to DHS in that OBBB, becuase the Congress need to balance the Budget each year, 170 billions over 5 years can be 34 billion in FY, 25, FY26, FY27, FY28 and FY29, but it could also be 68 billions in FY25, 0 billion in FY 26, and 34 billions in FY27,28 and 29. It depends on how the congress allocate the money every year, which is what this appropriation bill is for.


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On the other hand, they can make another Budget Reconciliation Bill next year if Dem retaken the Congress, and allocate absolutely fcuk all to DHS, that's the issue with the Reconciliation Bill because you don't need 60 senators to pass, which means it can be reverse quickly.
 
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US govt shuts down but quick resolution expected

AFP
January 31, 2026

The US government entered a partial shutdown Saturday as a midnight funding deadline passed without Congress approving a 2026 budget, though disruption was expected to be limited with the House set to move early next week to ratify a Senate-backed deal.

The funding lapse followed a breakdown in negotiations driven by Democratic anger over the killing of two protesters in Minneapolis by federal immigration agents, which derailed talks over new money for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

“Instead of going after drug smugglers, child predators, and human traffickers, the Trump Administration is wasting valuable resources targeting peaceful protestors in Chicago and Minneapolis,” Senate Democratic Minority Whip Dick Durbin posted on social media.

“This Administration continues to make Americans less safe.” Roughly three-quarters of federal operations are affected, potentially triggering shutdown procedures across a wide range of agencies and operations, from education and health to housing and defense.

Federal departments were expected to begin implementing shutdown plans overnight, but congressional leaders in both parties said the Senate’s action made a short disruption far more likely than a prolonged impasse.

If the House approves the package as expected early next week, funding would be restored within days, limiting the practical impact of the shutdown on government services, contractors and federal workers.

If the shutdown extended more than a few days, however, tens of thousands of federal workers would risk being put on unpaid leave or working without their money until funding is restored.
 
Late Friday, the Senate passed a package clearing five outstanding funding bills to cover most federal agencies through September, along with a two-week stopgap measure to keep DHS operating while lawmakers continue negotiations over immigration enforcement policy.

The House of Representatives was out of session as the deadline expired and is not scheduled to return until Monday.

President Donald Trump backed the Senate deal and urged swift House action, signaling he wanted to avoid a prolonged shutdown — the second of his second term — after a record-length stoppage last fall disrupted federal services for more than a month.
 

Political backlash​

The Senate breakthrough came only after Republican Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina lifted a procedural block that had stalled the package late Thursday.

Graham had objected to provisions in the DHS stopgap and to House-passed language repealing an earlier measure that allowed senators to sue the Justice Department if their phone records were seized during past investigations.

Graham agreed to release his hold after Senate leaders committed to holding future votes on legislation he is sponsoring to crack down on so-called “sanctuary cities” that refuse to cooperate with federal deportation operations.

Democrats, meanwhile, have remained united in opposing new DHS funding without changes to immigration enforcement following the fatal shootings of Alex Pretti and Renee Good in Minneapolis.

Their deaths intensified scrutiny of federal agents’ conduct and hardened opposition to approving money for immigration agencies without new guardrails.

Party leaders have accused immigration authorities of operating with insufficient oversight and have demanded reforms including tighter warrant requirements, limits on certain enforcement tactics and greater accountability for agents in the field.
 

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