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With the NCAA baseball tournament field now whittled down to 16 teams, it’s natural to ask which of the regional champs have the best chance to bring home the title in Omaha, Nebraska, at the end of the month. In all honesty, given that half the national seeds have already been eliminated, your guess is probably as good as ours. Nevertheless, we shall take a stab at ranking the 16 remaining teams.

First and foremost, a few caveats are in order. This ranking is completely unscientific. Poll positions and seeds are taken into account, but recent performance and historic postseason success are also factors considered. Home field in the upcoming super regional round is an edge, but it’s anything but a guarantee of success as we’ve already seen in this tournament. With all that out of the way then, here’s how we rank the 16 survivors.

No. 1 Arkansas

Is this finally the Razorbacks’ year? Arkansas was a win away in 2018 but has yet to claim a national championship. In addition to being the highest-seeded team still in the tournament, this year’s squad would appear to have the necessary combination of pitching depth and timely hitting for a long stay should it make it to Omaha. But the Hogs have a tough assignment against the defending champion Volunteers.

No. 2 North Carolina

The Tar Heels look to have the best position of the ACC’s sizable five-team contingent in the round of 16 after getting past Oklahoma in an elimination game to advance. UNC is also seeking its first title, but Gavin Gallaher has been on an absolute tear at the plate in the postseason, and Jake Knapp is a true staff ace.

No. 3 Auburn

The Tigers rebounded in a big way from a subpar 2024 campaign thanks to a significant roster overhaul. They swept their regional while several of their SEC brethren weren’t nearly as successful, and now they seek a return trip to Omaha after a two-year absence. Their last obstacle, however, is significant (see below).

No. 4 Tennessee

The Volunteers weren’t the most consistent bunch in SEC play this season, particularly in the latter half of the campaign. The offense gets a lot of the headlines but there are enough arms to weather what should be an electric atmosphere at Arkansas. They’ve had success against the Razorbacks before, and if they find a way to reach Omaha they’d have a solid chance to repeat.

No. 5 LSU

Though the Bayou Bengals had to work a little harder than expected to get past a pesky group of Trojans from Little Rock, they’d be a popular choice to add to their seven championship banners if they reach the College World Series. LSU isn’t as reliant on offense as years past with Anthony Eyanson and Kade Anderson giving the pitching staff two elite starting options.

No. 6 Oregon State

Perhaps it was the shock of losing to Saint Mary’s in the opener last week, but the Beavers’ bats woke up in time for them to avoid elimination in their home park. It won’t hurt that they get to stay in Corvallis while their opponent must travel across the continent, but maintaining the hit parade against Florida State’s accomplished hurlers will be a challenge.

No. 7 Louisville

After sweeping their regional that included top overall seed Vanderbilt, the Cardinals can’t be counted out. Their matchup against Miami guarantees at least one ACC squad will be represented next week at the CWS, though Louisville did not encounter the Hurricanes during the regular season.

No. 8 UCLA

The Bruins broke through for their first baseball title in 2013. Somewhat surprisingly, they haven’t been back to Omaha since. This year’s group is happy to be home after accumulating many more travel miles in its first Big Ten season. Balance is a big part of their success with excellent defense supporting a solid hitting and pitching group.

No. 9 Florida State

As long-time Seminoles’ fans are well aware, getting to Omaha has not been the issue. They’ve been there 24 times without a title. But first things first, as they’ll need to win a series on the west coast before dealing with the inevitable questions about all the years of CWS futility. Starting pitchers Jamie Arnold and Joey Volini will be asked to lead the way in slowing down Oregon State.

No. 10 Coastal Carolina

We admit we might have the Chanticleers too low here. They rank second in ERA (3.22), which certainly gives them a chance to cool Auburn’s hot bats. The offensive firepower in the Sun Belt top to bottom doesn’t match the SEC, of course, but Coastal faced its share of major conference competition during the season as well. The offense relies less on the long ball than manufacturing runs.

No. 11 Duke

Even Duke’s meager College World Series history comprising three appearances, the most recent in 1961, is more than that of its opponent this weekend. We’ll say this much – the Blue Devils’ series against Murray State should be quite entertaining, especially if you like to see a lot of runs scored.

No. 12 Arizona

The Wildcats flew under the radar a bit this season as they negotiated their new conference, but they still won the Big 12 tournament and got through regionals – albeit with the benefit of not facing host Oregon. There’s no shortage of history in the program that claims four national championships, but this group has a difficult road assignment in Chapel Hill.

No. 13 Texas-San Antonio

The Roadrunners are sailing in uncharted waters. But now that they’ve cracked the super regionals for the first time – at the expense of their state’s flagship school no less – they won’t be bothered by the increasingly bigger stage. UTSA has scored more runs than any of the remaining 16 teams, so their bats should provide a test for UCLA’s solid pitching staff.

No. 14 West Virginia

‘No lead is safe’ might be a cliché, but it definitely applies to this scrappy bunch of Mountaineers after thrilling comeback victories against Clemson and Kentucky that got them through their regional in three games. They also perform well away from Morgantown, but overcoming the home environs in Baton Rouge will still be a major challenge.

No. 15 Miami (Fla.)

The Hurricanes are arguably the shakiest of the handful of ACC squads to reach this point even thought they worked their way through both Alabama and Southern Mississippi for their first super regional since 2016. As mentioned above, they did not meet Louisville earlier, though their results against the conference’s upper tier would suggest winning twice on the road is a tall order.

No. 16 Murray State

Perhaps we should pay more attention to the Missouri Valley tournament on an annual basis. The Racers’ run through Mississippi’s regional means an MVC squad has reached the super regionals in four of the last five seasons. Murray State will undoubtedly have to continue its high run production to keep up with Duke, but the Racers will enjoy the ride regardless.

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The NFL is unmatched when it comes to, well, pretty much everything.

Hypocrisy included.

The NFL announced Wednesday that it is partnering with the International Center for Responsible Gaming for research into gambling by college students and athletes. The NFL is also giving the ICRG money so the group can update educational materials designed to prevent gambling by kids.

“This initiative reflects our ongoing commitment to promoting responsible gambling and fostering a safe and supportive environment for athletes, fans, and communities,” Anna Isaacson, the NFL’s senior vice president of social responsibility, said in a release.

Take a minute and let all that sink in. Maybe read it again.

Then feel free to beat your head against the wall.

The NFL, the league that has partnerships with FanDuel, DraftKings, Caesars and other gaming companies and last year held the Super Bowl in Las Vegas – and this year at an arena whose naming rights belong to a gaming company – is concerned about the harmful effects of gambling.

Even if the end result of this partnership with ICRG is admirable and worthwhile, this is akin to an arsonist providing fire prevention tips. The NFL can’t wring its hands and express concern that teenagers and young 20-somethings, whose brains are still developing, are becoming problem gamblers when it is helping to lead them down that pathway.

When you contribute to the harm, you don’t get credit for trying to limit its impact.

“Yes, there is some hypocrisy there. That being said, it’s not nearly on the same level as the gambling companies themselves,” said Victor Matheson, an economist at Holy Cross who specializes in sports and gambling.

“The NFL does not need addicted gamblers,” Matheson said. “FanDuel and DraftKings do.”

The NFL is trying to have it both ways, however. It’s just fine taking the money from FanDuel and DraftKings and Caesars and BetMGM and … well, you get the picture. It’s OK with allowing those companies to use their relationship with the NFL to encourage more people to bet and to bet more. Yet it acts as if it hasn’t played a role in fueling a culture in which sports betting has become normalized, and young people, boys in particular, are gambling at younger and younger ages.

There was a time when the NFL could take the moral high ground on this issue. For years, in fact, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell was hypervigilant about the league avoiding even the appearance of an association with gambling. He sent strongly worded letters to any state that tried to do an end-around the NFL’s gaming prohibitions, and the league refused an ad from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority during the Super Bowl in 2003.

Goodell even forced Tony Romo, then the Dallas Cowboys quarterback, to cancel a fantasy football convention in Las Vegas in 2015.

All that changed in 2018, when a Supreme Court ruling effectively legalized gambling across the country. Now sports betting is legal in all but 11 states, according to the American Gaming Association, with 32 states allowing online and mobile sports betting.

Rather than standing its ground, the NFL realized there was money to be made and said, “The heck with principles!”

But while the NFL is getting paid, it’s ordinary people who are paying the price.  

“We’ve seen gambling companies become a little more evil,” Matheson said, referring to the ease and pervasiveness of online betting. “It’s much more of an addictive product now.”

And the NFL is an active partner in that.

Ads for gaming companies are incessant during NFL broadcasts — I saw Kevin Hart so much this season, I almost felt as if he was part of my family — and some of its most famous alums are shilling for the sports books. DraftKings sponsors the NFL RedZone, the wildly popular whip-around show. Caesars has naming rights to the Superdome in New Orleans, home of the Saints and host of this year’s Super Bowl.

If the NFL thinks it’s “fostering a safe and supportive environment” related to gambling, it’s got a funny way of doing it.

There is a cautionary tale for the NFL and every other sports league that has cozied up to the gaming companies.

Sports and gambling have been intertwined in the United Kingdom for about half a century, to the point it is ubiquitous in the English Premier League. Ads for sports books are on the ribbon boards lining the fields, unavoidable for fans in the stands and watching on TV. Of the 20 teams in the EPL this season, 12 had a gaming company as its front-of-jersey sponsor.

But as concerns about problem gambling increased, drawing the attention of the UK government, the EPL announced it would prohibit front-of-jersey sponsors by gaming companies beginning with the 2026-27 season.

The same could happen in the United States, Matheson said.

“(The NFL) isn’t going to walk away from the money without an awfully good reason to do so,” he said. “But I think there is a real chance they will walk away from the money, or not squawk too loudly, when restrictions are placed upon them by state governments who want to restrict the worst excesses of the gambling companies.”

Maybe. But even if that happens, it will not diminish the harm the NFL did so willingly.  

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

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Soccer fans hoping to see Champions League winner Paris Saint-Germain, runner-up Inter Milan or other standout clubs participating in the FIFA Club World Cup later this month will need to shell out less than $36 for some tickets.

The cheapest tickets for half of the Club World Cup’s group stage matches (24 of 48 total) are under $36 all-in with fees before taxes.

Adding in all tickets under $60, 34 of the 48 group stage matches (or more than 70% of the tournament) will be nominally priced considering other matches – particularly involved Real Madrid – start in the $100 range.

Looking for a Father’s Day gift? Tickets to the Club World Cup opener on June 14 featuring Lionel Messi and Inter Miami against Egyptian club Al Alhy at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium start at $55.75.

The Seattle Sounders will play their Club World Cup opener on June 15 at home in Lumen Field, against Brazilian club Botafogo, with tickets also starting at $55.75.

Some of the days and times might not be ideal – noon or 3 p.m. on a weekday, 6 p.m. in the heat of rush hour traffic, or 9 p.m. on a Sunday or weeknight. But it’s still a chance to watch some of the best teams in the world compete in a new tournament that could gain some steam before the knockout stages and the July 13 final at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

Here are the cheapest Club World Cup tickets from Ticketmaster with dates, local times and the venues:

$33.45 before taxes

June 16: CR Flamengo vs. Esperance, 9 p.m. ET (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)
June 17: Fluminense vs. Borussia Dortmund, 12 p.m. ET (MetLife Stadium, New Jersey)
June 17: CA River Plate vs. Urawa Red Diamonds, 12 p.m. PT (Lumen Field, Seattle)
June 17: Ulsan vs. Mamelodi Sundowns, 6 p.m. ET (Inter&Co Stadium, Orlando)
June 18: CF Pachuca vs. FC Salzburg, 6 p.m. ET (TQL Stadium, Cincinnati)
June 19: Paris Saint-Germain vs. Botafogo, 6 p.m. PT (Rose Bowl, Los Angeles)
June 20: SL Benfica vs. Auckland City FC, 12 p.m. ET (Inter&Co Stadium, Orlando)
June 20: Los Angeles FC vs. Esperance, 5 p.m. CT (GEODIS Park, Nashville)
June 21: Inter Milan vs. Urawa Red Diamonds, 12 p.m. PT (Lumen Field, Seattle)
June 21: Fluminense vs. Ulsan HD, 6 p.m. ET (MetLife Stadium, New Jersey)
June 21: River Plate vs. Monterrey, 6 p.m. PT (Rose Bowl, Los Angeles)
June 22: Juventus vs. Wydad AC, 12 p.m. ET (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)
June 22: Manchester City vs. Al Ain FC, 9 p.m. (Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta)
June 23: Atletico de Madrid vs. Botafogo, 12 p.m. PT (Rose Bowl, Los Angeles)
June 23: FC Porto vs. Al Ahly, 9 p.m. ET (MetLife Stadium, New Jersey)
June 24: Boca Juniors vs. Auckland City FC, 2 p.m. CT (GEODIS Park, Nashville)
June 24: Bayern Munchen vs. SL Benfica, 3 p.m. ET (Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte)
June 24: Los Angeles FC vs. CR Flamengo, 9 p.m. ET (Camping World Stadium, Orlando)
June 25: Borussia Dortmund vs. Ulsan, 3 p.m. ET (TQL Stadium, Cincinnati)
June 25: Mamelodi Sundowns vs. Fluminense, 3 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium, Miami)
June 25: CF Monterrey vs. Urawa Red Diamonds, 6 p.m. PT (Rose Bowl, Los Angeles)
June 26: Wydad vs. Al Ain, 3 p.m. ET (Audi Field, Washington DC)
June 26: Al Hilal vs. CF Pachuca, 8 p.m. CT (GEODIS Park, Nashville)

$35.70 before taxes

June 24: Chelsea vs. Esperance, 9 p.m. ET (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)

$40.15 before taxes

June 17: CF Monterrey vs. Inter Milan, 6 p.m. PT (Rose Bowl, Los Angeles)

$43.50 before taxes

June 21: Borussia Dortmund vs. Mamelodi Sundowns, 12 p.m. ET (TQL Stadium, Cincinnati)

$45.70 before taxes

June 19: SE Palmerias vs. Al Ahly, 12 p.m. (MetLife Stadium, New Jersey)

$47.95 before taxes

June 15: SE Palmerias vs. FC Port, 6 p.m. ET (MetLife Stadium, New Jersey)

$51.30 before taxes

June 18: Manchester City vs. Wydad AC, 12 p.m. ET (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)

$53.50 before taxes

June 22: FC Salzburg vs. Al Hilal, 6 p.m. ET (Audi Field, Washington DC)

$55.75 before taxes

June 14: Inter Miami vs. Al Ahly, 8 p.m. ET (Hard Rock Stadium, Miami)
June 15: Seattle Sounders vs. Botafogo, 7 p.m. PT (Lumen Field, Seattle)
June 25: Inter Milan vs. River Plate, 6 p.m. PT (Lumen Field, Seattle)

$58 before taxes

June 19: Inter Miami vs. FC Porto, 3 p.m. ET (Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta)

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Pep Guardiola has no plans to leave Manchester City anytime soon but the Spaniard has often thought about what it would be like to guide an international team and says he would love to take on the challenge of a World Cup or Euros campaign.

‘I would love to be in a World Cup, in a Euro, a Copa America,” Guardiola told Reuters in an exclusive interview. “I have always thought about it. But it depends on many, many things. If it happens, it’s fine. If it doesn’t happen, it’s more than fine as well.’

After winning 12 domestic top-flight titles across Spain, Germany and England, Guardiola endured a trophyless campaign with City last season, a shock to the system after so much success.

While he came in for some stinging criticism over his elite squad’s failure on all fronts, Guardiola said he was not interested in ‘proving the haters wrong” when City start fresh next season.

‘It’s to prove myself that I can do it, I don’t want to have those feeling that last season left” he added.

‘Because when we win, the wine tastes better afterwards, you sleep better. I don’t know a manager who loses games and sleeps like a baby. It doesn’t happen. You’ve got to worry. That’s part of our life.’

Top of Guardiola’s ‘to-do list’ is to win another Champions League with City and should they cross paths once more with Real Madrid, his nemesis Carlo Ancelotti will not be in the opposing dugout after the Italian took charge of Brazil.

Mere mention of Ancelotti’s departure was enough to put a smile on Guardiola’s lips.

The pair faced each other five times in the knockout rounds of the Champions League, with the Italian coming out on top in all but one.

‘I’m so happy for him,” Guardiola said. ‘But I’m so happy that he’s not in Madrid anymore because all the time he beats me. That I don’t have to handle it anymore.’

The Spaniard added that it was unrealistic to expect him to win everything every year, and said that even the most successful athletes lose more than they win.

‘I won 12 domestic leagues in 16 years. It’s not bad, I would say. But you cannot win all the time. I cannot win the Champions League all the time,’ he added.

‘Michael Jordan, the best athlete I’ve ever seen in my life won six NBA Championships in 15 years. Tiger Woods, one incredible golf player, Jack Nicklaus, I don’t know how many he has. But they lost more Grand Slams than they won. It happens.’

Enjoying a short holiday in Barcelona, Guardiola said he is just trying to live a ‘normal life’ before football pulls him back in, with City set to play in the revamped Club World Cup in the United States from June 14 to July 13.

“Wake up later and don’t be with the players. Try to live what would be a normal life,” Guardiola said.

“Go to a concert, lay down on the sofa, read books. I can play golf when my body allows me. Watch series that people suggest to me during the season to watch, like I’m not able to do.

‘And I want to tell you something. Usually, I’m going to do the same things as you do in your life.”

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The FIFA Club World Cup will kick off nearly 400 hours of soccer programming from Spanish language broadcaster TelelvisaUnivision this summer.

The network is calling it ‘verano futbolero” – summer of football – and will air four major international tournaments on TV and live stream.

Univision will produce and package all 63 Club World Cup matches available to live stream for free in English on DAZN, TelevisaUnivision president of global sports Olek Loewenstein told USA TODAY Sports.

Univision, UniMás and TUDN will also broadcast 18 Club World Cup matches in Spanish, including the June 14 opener featuring Lionel Messi and the July 13 final. TNT will broadcast matches on TV in English.

The Concacaf Gold Cup held June 15-July 7 will be available on Univision, UniMás, TUDN and ViX. The entire UEFA Women’s Euro (July 2-27) and CONMEBOL Women’s Copa America (July 12-August 2) will be available to stream on ViX with select games broadcasting on TUDN.

The company will also broadcast this summer’s Leagues Cup tournament, which pits clubs from Major League Soccer and LIGA MX in Mexico against each other from July 30-August 31.

‘When it comes to just pure hours of soccer programming this summer, we really are kind of at the forefront of making sure that the game – the beautiful game – is being consumed here in the United States,” Loewenstein said.

The Club World Cup features 32 of the best soccer teams in the world, vying for their share of a $1 billion prize pool later this month.

The reigning Champions League winner Paris Saint-Germain and runner-up Inter Milan are in the field. Real Madrid and Athletico Madrid from Spain; Manchester City and Chelsea from England; Bayern Munich and Borussia Dortmund from Germany; Juventus from Italy; and other standout clubs from Argentina, Brazil and Mexico are in the mix.

Along with Inter Miami, the Seattle Sounders and LAFC will represent Major League Soccer in the tournament.

‘Club World Cup is the first time the tournament this size happens. I’m excited to see how the U.S. receives the tournament. I think that’s part of what I want to see,” Loewenstein said. “But I’m also excited to see matchups that we always say we would want to see, and this is the first time you’re actually going to get those, right? Everybody talks a big game on the league side of how big your team is and, ‘If I played you in this game, I would be better.’ And I think this is going to be a time where we’re going to be able to see, comparatively, the power of the different big leagues in the world.”

Messi and Inter Miami face Egyptian side Al Ahly at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium in the Club World Cup opener. The Club World Cup final will be played at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey.

Club World Cup matches will also be played in Atlanta, Charlotte, Cincinnati, Los Angeles, Nashville, Orlando, Philadelphia, Seattle and Washington D.C. this summer.

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Texas softball’s Reese Atwood pulled a Miguel Cabrera in the 2025 Women’s College World Series.

The Longhorns catcher was in the process of being intentionally walked by Texas Tech ace NiJaree Canady in Game 1 of the championship series, with Texas trailing 1-0 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City. Instead, a 3-0 pitch by Canady caught too much of the plate and Atwood drove a single to right field to plate a pair of runs.

The Longhorns took a 2-1 lead over the Red Raiders in the bottom of the sixth inning as a result of Atwood’s heroics.

For Atwood, it was a bit of redemption. She had appeared to catch Logan Halleman stealing second base in the fifth inning, but Leighann Goode was called for obstruction and Halleman was awarded second base. Mihyia Davis drove in the go-ahead run one batter later.

Speaking after the game with ESPN’s Holly Rowe, Atwood said she noticed Canady’s first pitch was in the zone, adding that she noticed her pitches were slowing in the at-bat, prompting her to swing on what would have been the fourth ball.

‘I knew I was gonna have to take a risk to do something for my team.’

The play ultimately proved to be the game-winner for the Longhorns after the Red Raiders failed to get the tying run to cross the plate in the top of the seventh inning.

Speaking to reporters after the game in Oklahoma City, Canady said she took responsibility for the loss.

‘I made that mistake,’ Canady said (via the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal). ‘That loss is on me and I apologize to my team.’

With that, Atwood and Texas will take a 1-0 lead into the potentially fateful Game 2 on June 5.

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House Republicans in Democrat-controlled states are firing a warning shot at the Senate as it considers President Donald Trump’s ‘one big, beautiful bill.’

GOP lawmakers in New York and California have been demanding that senators leave the House’s increased state and local tax (SALT) deduction cap in the bill, even as members of the upper chamber eye it as low-hanging fruit for saving taxpayer dollars.

But those blue state Republicans have made raising the current $10,000 SALT deduction cap an existential issue, arguing it provides much-needed tax relief to people in high-cost-of-living areas. The SALT deduction allows people living in areas with high state and local taxes to deduct those penalties in their federal tax filings, up to a point.

‘When did taxing income that’s already been taxed become a Republican ideal? Our party has always stood for lower taxes and a fair, commonsense tax code. We worked in good faith with House leadership to secure a fair deal that provides our constituents with much-needed SALT relief,’ SALT Caucus co-chairs Reps. Young Kim, R-Calif., and Andrew Garbarino, R-N.Y., said in a statement.

‘Hardworking families we represent are penalized by the SALT cap, and this deal keeps the President’s commitment to fix this issue and has the support of firefighters, police, small businesses and working Americans who keep our country moving.’

House Republicans can afford little dissent with their razor-thin majority to still pass the bill again, if the Senate returned a modified version – something the SALT caucus pointed out.

‘The Senate would be remiss to forget that the path to 218 — and delivering for the American people — runs through the SALT Caucus,’ the statement read.

The House-passed budget reconciliation bill – aimed at advancing Trump’s priorities on tax, energy, defense, immigration, and the national debt – raises the SALT deduction cap to $40,000.

Republicans are working on the bill as the national debt climbs past $36 trillion.

Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, R-N.Y., a SALT Caucus member and one of the House’s GOP tax-writers, sent in a statement to Fox News Digital, ‘The State and Local Tax (SALT) deduction negotiated in the House should NOT be altered by the Senate. It’s a Republican principle to allow taxpayers to keep more of their hard-earned money and taxpayers in New York and other SALT states deserve not to be double taxed by their government, especially when we also supported significant savings by rooting out waste, fraud & abuse in our states.’

Rep. Mike Lawler, R-N.Y., who also fought for the increased cap, signaled he would not support the bill if the Senate reinstated the lower number.

‘NY, NJ, and CA have and continue to subsidize many of the states represented in the Senate Republican conference. Furthermore, SALT has been used as a payfor for other provisions in the bill, including the doubling of the standard deduction, which is to the benefit of all Americans,’ Lawler wrote on X.

‘Since the last tax bill, 29 states have blown past the 10k cap. This isn’t a red vs blue issue, it’s an issue of double taxation. Since when do Republicans advocate for taxing you on top of taxes already paid? No SALT. No Deal.’

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., met with Trump to shore up support for the tax portion of the budget reconciliation bill, and said he recognized SALT was a key issue for blue-state Republicans in the House – but it was one that didn’t really move the needle for Republican senators.

‘We also start from a position that there really isn’t a single Republican senator who cares much about the SALT issue,’ Thune said. ‘It’s just not an issue that plays. Most of our states, we’re states that are low-tax states, and we don’t think that low-tax states ought to be subsidizing high-tax states.’

Indeed, no Senate Republican hails from a blue state, making the issue for many lawmakers in the upper chamber a moot point. And Thune’s position echoes that of many in the House GOP who were wary of increasing the SALT cap. 

Still, Thune and Senate Republican leadership acknowledge that whatever tweaks and changes to the budget bill that they make have to pass muster with their colleagues in the House.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., told reporters Thursday morning that he is still keeping SALT lawmakers ‘calm.’

The speaker added that he had been urging the Senate to keep the House’s bill intact.

‘Look, the Senate Republicans are from red states, right? They feel the same way that I do about SALT, but I’m being very deliberate in reminding them that we have, again, this very delicate balance to maintain over here, and you’ve got to address the issue so that our members can take something home,’ Johnson said.

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Republican Sen. Pete Ricketts, Democrat Sen. John Fetterman and others are teaming up on legislation to codify oversight on foreign countries buying American farmland.

The bipartisan Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure (AFIDA) Improvements Act seeks to implement recommendations published by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) in January 2024, which found the AFIDA was ill-equipped to combat foreign ownership of American agricultural land. 

‘American farmland should remain in the hands of American farmers and ranchers, not foreign adversaries,’ Ricketts of Nebraska shared first with Fox News Digital. ‘The neighbors who feed us should benefit from land ownership, not Communist China. Food security is national security.’

The bill, also co-sponsored by Sens. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama, John Cornyn of Texas, Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska introduced legislation, requires AFIDA reporting for foreign persons holding more than one percent interest in American agricultural land.

‘Over the past several decades, China has been buying up American farmland in an attempt to infiltrate our agriculture supply chains. Food security is national security, and we cannot give the CCP a foothold,’ Tuberville said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

The AFIDA Improvements Act aims to increase information-sharing between the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). It also requires updates to the AFIDA’s handbook and establishes a deadline for USDA to set up an online AFIDA system. 

The bill’s House sponsor, Bacon, told Fox News Digital that ‘having actual processes in place will strengthen the security of our nation in the event nefarious foreign agents, such as the CCP, try to purchase agricultural lands within our nation.’ 

Based on the GAO’s recommendations, the bill seeks to update the Agricultural Foreign Investment Disclosure Act of 1978 to better equip the USDA to combat foreign adversaries’ ownership of American agricultural land.

Under AFIDA, foreign entities must disclose to the USDA transactions of American agricultural land. 

Foreign investors own over 40 million acres of agricultural land in the United States, and between 2010 and 2021, Chinese ownership of American agricultural land increased from 13,720 acres to 383,935 acres, according to the USDA. 

The AFIDA Improvements Act is the latest attempt by Congressional Republicans to track foreign ownership of American farmland and strengthen national security. It was first introduced by Bacon and Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisc., in 2024. 

China owned around 350,000 acres of farmland across 27 states as of last year, according to data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture

The movement to ban China from buying U.S. farmland located near military bases has been gaining steam in the Senate this year. The PASS Act, led by Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., has the backing of Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., and would prevent any entity from a ‘covered country,’ which includes China, North Korea, Russia and Iran, from purchasing agricultural land near military bases or sensitive sites. 

Republican Sens. Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Kevin Cramer of North Dakota and Katie Britt of Alabama, proposed The Not One More Inch or Acre Act, earlier this year to ban China from buying U.S. land entirely. 

On the presidential campaign trail in 2024, President Donald Trump indicated he would ban China from buying American farmland. 

The Senate passed an amendment with bipartisan support in 2023 that would ban China, Russia, North Korea and Iran from buying American farmland and agricultural businesses, but it did not become law. 

Fox News Digital’s Morgan Phillips contributed to this report. 

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The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), a U.S. and Israeli-backed group, has been the subject of backlash since before it began distributing aid last month. Since the beginning of its operations there have been reports of violent incidents near distribution sites. Recently, the IDF admitted that troops shot ‘suspects’ who failed to heed orders to back away from the soldiers.

One of the most vocal critics of GHF has been the United Nations, with U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher urging the world to let his agency handle the situation. However, Israeli officials have pushed back on the U.N. narrative, saying that GHF is distributing aid without letting Hamas benefit.

‘Hamas is doing everything that it can to sabotage this effort to distribute aid directly to the people,’ Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs Spokesperson Oren Marmorstein told Fox News Digital.  He also said that the terror group is ‘extremely afraid’ that if the GHF is successful, it will ‘lose its grip’ on the population of Gaza.

Marmorstein blamed Hamas for spreading ‘fake news’ and ‘fake information’ to take down the GHF.

On Wednesday, the U.S. vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution that called for an immediate ceasefire, the return of all hostages and the lifting of all restrictions on humanitarian aid entering the Strip. Israel has repeatedly asserted that without limitations on aid entering Gaza, Hamas would be able to enrich itself and keep control over the area.

In remarks ahead of the veto, U.S. Chargé d’Affaires Dorothy Shea criticized the resolution, saying it failed to ‘acknowledge the disastrous shortcomings of the prior method of aid delivery, which allowed Hamas to enrich itself at the expense of Palestinians, and failed to get food and water to those who needed it most.’

She also urged U.N. member states to support GHF ‘to help it safely deliver aid without it being diverted by Hamas.’

Shea is not alone in her criticism of the U.N.’s approach to GHF. Israeli U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon recently accused the international body of employing ‘mafia-like’ tactics against NGOs that worked with GHF.

‘Without any discussion, without due process, the U.N. removed those NGOs from the shared aid database. That database is the central system for tracking aid deliveries into Gaza,’ Danon told the Security Council on May 28. ‘This is the gravest violation of the U.N.’s own principles. It is extortion of well-meaning NGOs that refuse to kiss the ring.’

The GHF closed its distribution sites on Wednesday, saying it was working to bolster security and would reopen on Thursday. However, the reopening was delayed because of maintenance work. The sites eventually resumed aid distribution later on Thursday.

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Trump-loyalist Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., dropped a bombshell this week, revealing that she had not read the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in its entirety and no longer supports it. 

Greene joins the growing list of President Donald Trump’s staunchest House GOP allies who have come out in opposition of the bill they voted for two weeks ago. 

Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., another loyal MAGA member, said Elon Musk was ‘right to call out House Leadership’ this week.

‘I wish I had a nickel for every time the @freedomcaucus sounded the alarm and nobody listened, only to find out the hard way we were right all along. We expect MASSIVE improvements from the Senate before it gets back to the House,’ Perry said, referring to the bill he voted for. 

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed by one vote in the House after weeks of overnight committee debates and last-minute huddles in House Speaker Mike Johnson’s office. Coined by Trump himself, he has championed the legislation to fulfill his key campaign promises, including border security, American energy production and tax cuts. 

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is under consideration by both a Republican-led White House and Congress. But it’s faced hiccups in the Senate this week as Republicans have indicated they do not support the bill in its current form. 

Leading the charge against Trump’s champion legislation is Musk, who has been a fixture of the second Trump administration through his leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Musk was a ‘special government employee’ until his leadership timeline expired last week.

And Musk’s newfound freedom from the executive branch seems to have inspired him to speak out about Trump’s bill.

‘I’m sorry, but I just can’t stand it anymore. This massive, outrageous, pork-filled Congressional spending bill is a disgusting abomination. Shame on those who voted for it: you know you did wrong. You know it,’ Musk revealed on Tuesday. 

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt dismissed a question from Fox News’ Peter Doocy this week about how angry Trump would be at Musk for undermining his legislation. 

‘Look, the president already knows where Elon Musk stood on this bill. It doesn’t change the president’s opinion. This is one big, beautiful bill, and he’s sticking to it,’ Leavitt said. 

Much of the discontent over the bill is rooted in Republicans’ reluctance to increase the United States’ national debt. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) on Wednesday reported that the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will cut taxes by $3.7 trillion while raising deficits by $2.4 trillion over a decade. 

Meanwhile, the national debt rose to $36,215,207,426,690.65 as of June 4, according to the latest numbers published by the Treasury Department. That is up about $806 million from the figure reported the previous day.

However, Greene’s newfound issue with the bill has to do with its 10-year restriction on states regulating artificial intelligence (AI). 

The provision reads, in part: ‘Except as provided in paragraph (2), no State or political subdivision thereof may enforce, during the 10-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act, any law or regulation of that State or a political subdivision thereof limiting, restricting, or otherwise regulating artificial intelligence models, artificial intelligence systems, or automated decision systems entered into interstate commerce.’

Greene, who voted in favor of the bill two weeks ago, said on X: ‘Full transparency, I did not know about this section on pages 278-279 of the OBBB that strips states of the right to make laws or regulate AI for 10 years. I am adamantly OPPOSED to this, and it is a violation of state rights and I would have voted NO if I had known this was in there.’

Not only does she regret her vote, but Greene is urging the Senate to remove the provision, or she won’t vote for the bill when it returns to the House. 

‘We have no idea what AI will be capable of in the next 10 years, and giving it free rein and tying states’ hands is potentially dangerous. This needs to be stripped out in the Senate. When the OBBB comes back to the House for approval after Senate changes, I will not vote for it with this in it,’ Greene said. 

Fox News Digital reached out to the White House and Greene for comment.

Fox News Digital’s Alex Nitzberg contributed to this report. 

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