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America’s defenses will not be able to keep up with its peer adversaries if the Pentagon continues to take years to innovate its weapons systems, experts agreed at a security summit last week. 

The Pentagon’s modernization was given a ‘D’ by the National Security Innovation Base Summit this week, a near-failing letter grade that national security leaders in Congress agreed was a fair assessment.

‘Progress lives in the private sector, and we’re not seeing enough progress in the public sector,’ said Govini CEO Tara Dougherty. ‘The department needs a massive kick in the pants in this area, and should be held accountable for catching up in progress to match what is happening among the investor community and among the technology sector.’

‘I think the score is a deserved score, unfortunately,’ House Armed Services Committee Vice Chair Rob Wittman said. 

‘The Pentagon is the Ford Motor Company of the 1950s. I mean, they the way they operate, slow, stoic,’ Wittman explained. ‘‘Let’s spend years to write a requirement, then let’s spend years to go to a program or record, let’s spend years to acquire.’ By the time we acquire something, guess what? The threat’s way ahead of us.’ 

‘We want them to reflect the Apple 2025 model.’

Nowhere is this clearer to defense leaders than in the nation’s shipbuilding capabilities. The Navy currently has 295 deployable ships, though its shipbuilding plan calls for that number to be increased to 390 by 2054. The Maritime Security Program, which maintains privately owned, military-useful ships to deploy in wartime, is down to 60 in its fleet. 

‘It’s precipitously low. We could not get to where we need to be in the Pacific right now if we needed to,’ Wittman told Fox News Digital. 

The issue seemingly keeps President Donald Trump awake at night. 

‘China specifically is better at cybersecurity than we are.’ – Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-Pa.

John Phelan, Trump’s nominee for Navy secretary, quipped during his confirmation hearing that the president texts him late at night, ‘sometimes after 1 a.m.’ about ‘rusty ships or ships in a yard, asking me, what am I doing about it?’ 

Phelan added that he has told the president, ‘I’m not confirmed yet and have not been able to do anything about it, but I will be very focused on it.’

‘We used to make so many ships,’ Trump lamented during a speech to a joint Congress on Tuesday. ‘We don’t make them anymore very much, but we’re going to make them very fast, very soon. It will have a huge impact.’ 

He announced he had establish a White House Office of Shipbuilding. 

With the Pentagon, ‘it’s process, process, process, not outcomes,’ said Wittman, who announced he would be co-chairing a defense modernization caucus in Congress.

‘We’re operating off of an innovation cycle right now that, you know, used to be a decade, and it used to be five years. Then it used to be three years, and now it’s a year or less innovation cycle,’ said Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo. ‘In Ukraine, they’re actually operating off of week-long innovation cycles.’ 

‘China is eating our boxed lunch in the energy area, in our cellular phone infrastructure, they’re trying to get into Wall Street, they’re trying to get into agriculture…’ – Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb.

Crow said it is up to Congress to give the Pentagon the ‘kick in the pants’ it needs to move faster. 

‘There are simply no demand signals being sent. So that requires a very real conversation about political will, which is actually bipartisan right now on this issue.’ 

The Pentagon began work on the F-35 fighter jet 25 years ago, and it is ‘just now getting into full scale production,’ noted Wittman. 

‘The capability of that aircraft, the modernization that it needs to keep up with the Chinese threat, it’s just not where it has to be.’

Even the newest F-35s need to be taken back to the assembly line to be fitted with 360-degree motion sensors known as the digital aperture system and the other latest technology in radars, Wittman said. 

‘We’re still not going to deliver the current jets coming off the line with technical refresh three hardware and have that software enabled until probably early next year.’ 

Under a new DOGE memo, the Pentagon has kicked off a review of its contracting procedures. ‘Each Agency Head, in consultation with the agency’s DOGE Team Lead, shall conduct a comprehensive review of each agency’s contracting policies, procedures, and personnel,’ a memo circulated this week read. 

Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-Pa., told Fox News Digital she worries most about the military being prepared to defend against a cyberattack. 

‘China specifically is better at cybersecurity than we are,’ she said. ‘It only takes one or two incursions that we don’t see coming or that we aren’t responsive to, to make an enormous difference here.’ 

Rep. Don Bacon, R-Neb., suggested that the U.S. may need to start thinking about offensive cyber missions. 

‘When it comes to cyber, we’ve got to change the rules of engagement,’ he said. ‘China is eating our boxed lunch in the energy area, in our cellular phone infrastructure, they’re trying to get into Wall Street, they’re trying to get into agriculture.’ 

‘We’re really good on cyberintelligence but we have [rules of engagement] that do not let us do nearly what China or Russia does,’ he continued. ‘I don’t think it’s like taking punches to the face, saying ‘can I have another.’’

‘We’ve got to be able to allow cyber command to fight fire with fire. I wouldn’t even advertise it that much. Just carry a big stick and, get them back.’ 

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You’re just days away from being able to tell your friends and family Happy New Year – in the NFL, that is.

At 4 p.m. ET on Wednesday, March 12, the NFL will officially ring in the new league year, signaling the start of NFL free agency. Some of the league’s more notable players will officially put pen to paper on new deals, but that doesn’t mean you won’t have an idea of where some of these guys are going.

The league’s legal tampering period begins noon ET on Monday. That means players with expiring contracts will have an opportunity to court new teams and make their signings official come Wednesday.

Already, some of the free agency intrigue has dissipated. Wide receiver Tee Higgins, quarterback Matthew Stafford and left tackle Ronnie Stanley are some of the top former, free-agents-to-be who are staying with their squads.

That news may force teams to get a little bit more creative – and that should make free agency all the more intriguing in 2025.

USA TODAY Sports will provide the latest rumors, updates, news and more from the NFL’s legal tampering period, ahead of NFL free agency on Wednesday. All times are Eastern.

NFL free agency signings, news, rumors

Broncos re-signing DT D.J. Jones to three-year deal

Date: March 10
Source: ESPN’s Adam Schefter

Jones was set to hit free agency in 2025. The Broncos agreed to a three-year, $39 million deal with $26 million in guarantees just before the tampering period opened to keep the veteran on Vance Joseph’s defense.

Jones, 30, had 42 tackles and one sack for the Broncos last season.

Justin Fields waiting to speak to Jets before making decision

Date: March 10
Source: ESPN’s Adam Schefter

Fields has reportedly been in discussions with the Steelers about re-joining the team in 2025, but the 26-year-old is waiting to see what the Jets offer him before making a decision.

New York’s offer can’t officially come until the legal tampering window opens at Noon ET on Monday, so that will likely leave Pittsburgh’s quarterback situation in flux until then.

Aaron Rodgers ’emerging as QB option’ for Steelers

Date: March 10
Source: ESPN’s Adam Schefter

The Steelers have largely been connected to their free-agent starting quarterbacks from last year, Justin Fields and Russell Wilson, ahead of free agency. However, Pittsburgh is ‘are expected to talk and explore a union’ with Rodgers, who is one of the top quarterbacks available on the market.

Rodgers, 41, is coming off a down season but still completed 63% of his passes for 3,897 yards, 28 touchdowns and 11 interceptions for the New York Jets. Mike Tomlin and the Steelers may view the veteran as the best candidate to get a lot out of their offense, which now features wide receiver DK Metcalf as one of its top receivers.

Patriots trade DT Davon Godchaux to Saints for 2026 draft pick

Date: March 10
Source: ESPN’s Adam Schefter

The Patriots gave Godchaux, a run-stuffing defensive tackle who spent four seasons with the team, permission to explore a trade this offseason. They found a willing partner in the Saints, who surrendered a 2026 seventh-round pick for the 30-year-old veteran.

Godchaux had 67 tackles in 2024. He hasn’t posted a sack since the 2022 NFL season.

Falcons sign Jake Matthews to two-year extension

Date: March 9
Source: NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo

Matthews has been Atlanta’s starting left tackle since the team selected him with the sixth overall pick in the 2014 NFL draft. The Falcons gave him a two-year, $45 million extension with $38 million in guarantees to keep him on board as a key cog in lefty Michael Penix’s protection.

Matthews has made 179 starts in his career and hasn’t missed a game since his rookie season. He has made 178 consecutive regular-season starts.

Steelers acquire WR DK Metcalf in trade with Seahawks

Date: March 9
Source: NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero

Metcalf demanded a trade away from the Seahawks the same day Seattle released veteran receiver Tyler Lockett. It didn’t take long for the Seahawks to find him a new home, as they shipped Metcalf to the Steelers for a second-round pick and a swap of sixth- and seventh-round selections.

Metcalf signed a five-year, $150 million extension as part of the trade. The 27-year-old had 66 catches for 992 yards and five touchdowns in 15 games last season.

Josh Allen signs record-breaking $330 million deal with Bills

Date: March 9
Source: USA TODAY’s Tyler Dragon

Allen won the NFL’s MVP award for 2024 after leading Buffalo to a 13-4 record and making it to the AFC championship game. The Bills handsomely rewarded him with a six-year contract extension that runs through the 2030 NFL season.

Allen’s new deal will be worth up to $330 million, giving the contract an average annual value of $55 million. The deal comes with a record-breaking $250 million in guarantees.

Patriots ink three-year deal with edge rusher Harold Landry

Date: March 9
Source: NFL Network’s Tom Pelissero

The Patriots needed to upgrade their pass rush during the 2025 offseason and landed Landry, who played at Boston College and will reunite with Mike Vrabel, who coached him for five years with the Titans. Landry can make up to $48 million with $26 million guaranteed as part of his three-year deal.

Landry, 29 in June, had 71 tackles and nine sacks for the Titans last season. He has 50.5 career sacks in 98 games (79 starts) and graded as Pro Football Focus’ seventh-best edge defender against the run among 212 players last season.

Rams sign Davante Adams to two-year contract

Date: March 9
Source: Los Angeles Rams

Adams wanted to head west after being released by the Jets. He got his wish, as he joined the Rams on what ESPN’s Adam Schefter reports is a two-year deal worth up to $46 million.

Adams had 85 catches for 1,063 yard sand eight touchdowns in 14 games split between the Raiders and Jets last season. The 32-year-old will be tasked with complimenting Puka Nacua as a No. 2 receiver and helping to replace Cooper Kupp, who is expected to be released or traded during the offseason.

NFL free agency: Best available players

Here are some of the best available players who will hit the market this week, per USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon:

Jevon Holland, S
Chris Godwin, WR
D.J. Reed, CB
Stefon Diggs, WR
Khalil Mack, edge
Amari Cooper, WR
Sam Darnold, QB
Josh Sweat, edge
Haason Reddick, edge
Justin Reid, S

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The Buffalo Bills backed up the Brinks truck for Josh Allen.

Allen and the Bills agreed to terms on a record-breaking six-year contract that keeps him in Buffalo through the 2030 season, the team announced Sunday. According to multiple reports, the contract is worth $330 million and includes $250 million guaranteed. It’s the largest guaranteed total ever given to an NFL player.

Allen won his first NFL MVP award for his 2024 season.

The Bills star quarterback recorded 4,269 total yards and 41 total touchdowns to just eight total turnovers in 2024.

Allen led Buffalo to a 13-4 record and a fifth-straight AFC East division title. The Bills have reached the AFC championship game twice within a five-year span with Allen at QB.

Since the Bills selected Allen No. 7 overall in the 2018 draft, the quarterback has registered the most wins (76), total touchdowns (262) and total yards (30,595) by any player all-time in their first seven seasons.

Allen is a three-time Pro Bowler and two-time second-team All-Pro. He’s produced 26,434 passing yards, 195 touchdowns, 4,142 rushing yards and 65 rushing touchdowns in 111 career regular-season games.

All the players and the plays: Sign up for USA TODAY’s Sports newsletter.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

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On Sunday, the eve of NFL free agency, multiple reports said the former Seattle Seahawks wideout was dealt to the Pittsburgh Steelers for a second-round pick in this year’s draft.

The NFL Network reported the deal was for five years and $150 million.

Metcalf requested a trade Wednesday after spending the first six seasons of his pro career in Seattle, the team that drafted him in the second round (64th overall) in the 2019 draft.

The two-time Pro Bowl receiver joins a Steelers receiving corps that, outside of George Pickens, lacks a true No. 1 target. Who will be throwing him the ball next season remains a question, as Pittsburgh could bring back Russell Wilson (or backup Justin Fields) for the starter role. Wilson and Metcalf overlapped for three seasons in Seattle.

Seahawks general manager John Schneider told a local radio station ‘we are talking to a ton of teams, taking offers, seeing what that looks like’ in the aftermath of Metcalf’s request.

According to Spotrac, Metcalf had one year worth $18 million on his current contract. NFL Network reported the Steelers are giving him a four-year, $132 million extension ($33 million per year) that puts him under contract with his new team through 2029.

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UConn will look to claim its fifth consecutive Big East tournament championship when the Huskies face Creighton on Monday night in the final.

The third-ranked Huskies have dominated in the tournament so far, with a 71-40 win over St. John’s in the quarterfinals and an 82-54 win over Villanova in the semifinals. Three-time Big East Player of the Year Paige Bueckers dropped 20 and 23 points in those games, respectively.

No. 22 ranked Creighton escaped Georgetown 72-70 in the quarterfinals before throttling Seton Hall 73-44 in the semifinals, giving the Bluejays some momentum as they look to upset the Huskies.

UConn defeated Creighton 72-53 and 72-61 this season, although it’s never easy to beat a team twice, let alone three times in the same season.

Here’s how to watch the women’s Big East tournament final between UConn and Creighton on Monday:

What channel is UConn vs Creighton on today?

TV channel: FS1
Streaming: Fox Sports app, Fubo

UConn-Creighton will air live on FS1, with streaming options available on the Fox Sports app or Fubo, which offers a free trial to potential subscribers.

Watch women’s Big East tournament final live with Fubo (free trial)

UConn vs Creighton time today

Time: 7 p.m. ET
Date: Monday, March 10
Location: Mohegan Sun Arena (Uncasville, Connecticut)

UConn vs Creighton predictions

UConn 70, Creighton 55: UConn, like it has twice before this season, will fend off Creighton yet again, this time taking home some hardware afterward. Paige Bueckers will finish out her final regular season with another conference championship, as she has done each of her five seasons with the Huskies.

UConn women’s basketball schedule 2025

March 9: UConn 82, Villanova 54
March 8: UConn 71, St. John’s 40
March 2: UConn 92, Marquette 57
Feb. 27: UConn 72, Creighton 53
Feb. 22: UConn 86, Butler 47

Creighton women’s basketball schedule 2025

March 9: Creighton 73, Seton Hall 44
March 8: Creighton 72, Georgetown 70
March 2: UConn 92, Marquette 57
Feb. 27: UConn 72, Creighton 53
Feb. 22: UConn 86, Butler 47

We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

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Growing up under Soviet rule, Lithuanian Defense Minister Dovilė Šakalienė was not allowed to celebrate Christmas. Her mother was born in a Siberian prison camp. 

The crime?

Her teenage brother was caught handing out leaflets that said, ‘Lithuania is free.’ After 50 years of Soviet occupation during the Cold War, many Lithuanians today are wary of any negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin and are watching the Kremlin’s next moves closely.

‘In my opinion, the only efficient diplomacy with Russia was what Al Capone said, the only good negotiation is when you have a gun on the table. So that’s probably the kind of diplomacy that would work with Russia,’ Šakalienė warned during an interview at the Lithuanian Embassy in Washington Friday.

When asked if Putin could be trusted, the 46-year-old defense minister, who once lived in Albuquerque, New Mexico, as an exchange student, replied, ‘Are you kidding me? After what was done to my family and by Russia for generations, I don’t think you would find any Lithuanian who could trust Vladimir Putin.’

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine is now more than three years old. Since returning to office, President Donald Trump has engaged in direct talks with Russia to end the war.

‘Historically, Russia has never ever kept an agreement,’ Šakalienė said.’ Our only hope is that the tough and harsh approach by President Donald Trump may be the only safeguard keeping Putin in check. So let’s hope that happens.’

Located in Eastern Europe with a population of 2.8 million in an area roughly the size of West Virginia, Lithuania cannot afford to ignore Russia. It shares a 184-mile border with Russia (Kaliningrad) as well as a 420-mile border with Belarus, which she says is ‘now just a platform for the Russian army.’

She said, ‘They are trying to frighten us. They are trying to make us feel insecure,’ about the Russian forces next door.

Lithuania is ramping up defense spending as a result of Russia launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine and plans to exceed Trump’s demand that NATO allies spend 5% of GDP on defense. Šakalienė said her country hopes to reach 6% by next year. The U.S. currently spends 3.4%.

Last month, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth also urged NATO allies to ramp up defense spending. ‘The United States will no longer tolerate an imbalanced relationship which encourages dependency,’ he warned at NATO headquarters in Brussels on his first overseas trip.

As a NATO defense minister, Šakalienė was there in Brussels. She applauded Hegseth’s remarks, calling them an ‘ice-cold bucket of water.’

‘I saw the faces of my colleagues. A lot of shock, a lot of stress,’ she said. ‘Nobody in the room mentioned 2% [of GDP] which is so redundant, irrelevant, inadequate. It’s gone. It’s old news.’

When asked why Western Europe has been lagging on defense spending years after Russia seized 20% of Ukraine, Šakalienė replied, ‘I think that a very large part of the democratic world got caught up in this illusion of an idealistic world, which has never existed.’

She said part of the illusion was believing wars are over. Russia never thought this way, she explained.

‘The non-democratic part of the world has not changed. They are actually playing by their rules. So if they are not playing by our rules, our blindness is what put us in this dangerous position.’

Šakalienė is the only NATO defense minister sanctioned by China. When asked about Beijing’s motives in supporting Russia, her answer might surprise some people.

‘Russia is able to boost its military production so efficiently because China is feeding it,’ she said.  ‘It is useful for China to have this war of exhaustion, and also it is useful for China, even though it supplies Russia, to see Russia also lose a lot of its soldiers – a lot of its weapons and equipment – because a weaker Russia is more convenient to China.’

Despite heavy battlefield losses in Ukraine over the past three years, Russia is building an army of 1.5 million soldiers, according to Šakalienė, who warned Putin has ‘more imperial expansion plans in his hand.’

When Fox News sat down at the Lithuanian Embassy on Friday, Trump was trying to secure a mineral rights agreement with Ukraine and eventually hopes to seek a ceasefire agreement with Russia.

‘If Russia violates the ceasefire, the response must be immediate and violent,’ Šakalienė urged.

When asked for her reaction to a report that Trump is considering not defending NATO allies who do not spend enough on defense, Šakalienė applauded the harsh rhetoric from Trump, calling it ‘painful’ but justified. ‘Everyone needs to contribute, burden sharing is the main rule if you really want to have a strong alliance.’

She pointed to the Baltic States and Poland as leading NATO members in defense spending as a percentage of GDP.

Last year, the European Union, which Lithuania is a member, spent more on Russian oil and gas than aid to Ukraine. Šakalienė said her country was ‘the first one to cut off’ Russian oil and gas. ‘We were even supporting our neighbors, Latvians and Polish with energy supplies. So for us, being independent of Russian energy is a matter of life and death.’

Lithuania’s first LNG terminal was aptly named ‘Independence,’ according to Frank Fannon, who served in Trump’s first term as assistant secretary of state for energy resources.

When Fox News sat down at the embassy, Lithuania had just announced it would be withdrawing from the convention on cluster munitions, an international agreement by more than 100 nations prohibiting cluster bombs. Šakalienė explained why Lithuania is pulling out.

‘We want to be ready to use anything and everything necessary to protect our borders. We don’t want Russians to come to our homes again. We want to send a strategic message, a very clear message, that we will do anything to protect ourselves.’  

Lithuania, along with other European nations, also wants to withdraw from another treaty soon known as the Ottawa Convention, which bans anti-personnel land mines.

‘This is a terrible weapon, just like cluster munitions, but the Russians are using the weapons, including forbidden weapons. So we want to send the message back,’ she said.

In addition to Russia, China and the United States are also not parties to the agreement. In 2014, the United States announced it would abide by the Ottawa Convention, except for the landmines already deployed on the Korean Peninsula.

Šakalienė, a deeply devout Christian, said Russia is not only attacking Ukraine, but the Christian faith as well.

‘It was Soviet Russia that tried to annihilate the church in Ukraine, in Lithuania, in Poland. They have now sort of revived their Christianity and are using it for KGB infiltration, for FSB infiltration, she said. ‘This is a betrayal.’

She continued, ‘When we see how churches in Ukraine are being bombed, being robbed…the Christian community in Ukraine is being murdered and their beautiful heritage is being destroyed.’

The Lithuanian defense minister ended the interview with a final warning.

‘We tend to try to diminish our enemies. This is a mistake. You have to see them for what they are.’

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is gearing up for a vote on Tuesday on a bill, which, if approved, will avert a partial government shutdown during the first 100 days of President Donald Trump’s term.

Given the lack of support from Democrats, Johnson is betting Republicans can muscle through largely by themselves on  the 99-page piece of legislation that would keep federal agencies funded until Sept. 30. 

Congress must act to avoid a partial government shutdown by Friday, March 14. Despite dozens of conservative defections on continuing resolutions over the past two years, Trump on Saturday called for Republicans to unite to support the bill. 

‘The House and Senate have put together, under the circumstances, a very good funding Bill (‘CR’)! All Republicans should vote (Please!) YES next week,’ Trump wrote on TRUTHSocial. ‘Great things are coming for America, and I am asking you all to give us a few months to get us through to September so we can continue to put the Country’s ‘financial house’ in order. Democrats will do anything they can to shut down our Government, and we can’t let that happen.’ 

‘We have to remain UNITED — NO DISSENT — Fight for another day when the timing is right,’ Trump added. ‘VERY IMPORTANT. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!’ 

Still, some Republicans have already signaled they would not support the CR. 

‘I’m not voting for the Continuing Resolution budget (cut-copy-paste omnibus) this week,’ Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., posted to X on Sunday. ‘Why would I vote to continue the waste fraud and abuse DOGE has found? We were told the CR in December would get us to March when we would fight. Here we are in March, punting again! WTFO.’ 

Rep. Ralph Norman, R-S.C., meanwhile, said he has never voted for a continuing resolution, but he is on board with Johnson’s effort. He says he has confidence in Trump and the Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, to make a difference on the nation’s debt. ‘I don’t like CRs,’ Norman said. ‘But what’s the alternative? Negotiate with Democrats? No.’

In a call with reporters on Saturday, House Republican leadership aides outlined how the bill provides for $892.5 billion in discretionary federal defense spending, and $708 billion in non-defense discretionary spending.

The aides emphasized that the bill was ‘closely coordinated’ with the White House – while stopping short of saying Trump backed the measure completely, noting he has not reviewed the specific pages yet.

It includes an additional $8 billion in defense dollars in an apparent bid to ease national security hawks’ concerns, while non-defense spending that Congress annually appropriates would decrease by about $13 billion.

There is  also an added $6 billion for healthcare for veterans.

The White House has requested additional spending in areas that were not present in the last government funding extension, known as ‘anomalies.’ Among the anomalies requested by Trump and being fulfilled by the bill is added funding for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Aides said the funding is meant to meet ‘an operations shortfall that goes back to the Biden administration.’

‘That money, most of that, has already been obligated prior to the start of this administration. So that request reflects an existing hole,’ a source said.

The bill also ensures that spending caps placed under a prior bipartisan agreement, the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA), are followed. The FRA mandated no more than a 1% federal spending increase in FY 2025. 

Cuts to non-defense discretionary spending would be found by eliminating some ‘side deals’ made during FRA negotiations, House GOP leadership aides said. Lawmakers would also not be given an opportunity to request funding for special pet projects in their districts known as earmarks, another area that Republicans are classifying as savings.

The bill does not cover the majority of government spending, including Social Security and Medicare. Funding for those two programs is on autopilot and not regularly reviewed by Congress. Still, Democratic leadership issued a statement Saturday saying they were troubled the bill does not take steps to protect those programs and Medicaid, which Republicans are eying to help pay for extending tax cuts passed in Trump’s first term.

‘We are voting no,’ a trio of House Democratic leaders, including House Minority Leader Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., said. 

The top Democrats on the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro and Washington Sen. Patty Murray, both issued statements blasting the legislation.

Murray said the legislation would ‘give Donald Trump and Elon Musk more power over federal spending — and more power to pick winners and losers, which threatens families in blue and red states alike.’ DeLauro, in an X post, called the CR ‘a power grab for the White House.’

Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, who heads the Senate Appropriations Committee, said the focus must be on preventing a shutdown because closures have negative consequences all across government.

‘They require certain essential government employees, such as Border Patrol agents, members of our military and Coast Guard, TSA screeners, and air traffic controllers, to report to work with no certainty on when they will receive their next paycheck,’ Collins said. ‘We cannot allow that to occur.’

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Elkind and the Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Ohio State and Notre Dame both started transfer quarterbacks in January’s national championship game. Three of four College Football Playoff semifinalists started a transfer quarterback. Half of the teams in the entire bracket had a transfer quarterback under center.

No position better embodies the new landscape ushered in by the transfer portal and the elimination of the one-year redshirt rule.

But while shuffling quarterbacks dominate transfer headlines, every Bowl Subdivision team is digging into the portal to replace starters, develop depth and unearth potential diamonds among another team’s castoffs.

Some programs do this better than others. As we look ahead to the 2025 season, transfers at quarterback and elsewhere are guaranteed to shape FBS conference races and the chase for the national championship. These teams did the best job reloading through the portal:

1. LSU

Top three transfers: EDGE Patrick Payton (Florida State), WR Nic Anderson (Oklahoma), WR Barion Brown.

LSU loaded up edge rushers, interior linemen and receivers in an effort to reverse a recent dip under coach Brian Kelly. Payton had 32 tackles for loss and 16 sacks in his three years with the Seminoles. Brown is also a game-changing talent in the return game. Anderson, Brown, and Oklahoma tight end transfer Bauer Sharp will make an immediate impact.

2. Texas Tech

Top three transfers: OT Howard Sampson (North Carolina), EDGE Romello Height (Georgia Tech), DT Lee Hunter (Central Florida).

Few programs have been more adept at mining the portal, with a big boost from some of the nation’s most robust NIL offerings. This class is loaded with help on both lines, with Sampson and Miami (Ohio) transfer Will Jados set for starting roles on the offensive front. Another addition to watch on offense is Louisiana-Lafayette tight end transfer Terrance Carter, who had 689 receiving yards last season.

SPRING POWER RANKINGS: Big Ten | SEC | ACC | Big 12

LOOKING AHEAD: Our way-too-early college football Top 25 for 2025

3. Oregon

Top three transfers: OT Isaiah World (Nevada), OL Emmanuel Pregnon (Southern California), RB Makhi Hughes (Tulane).

Oregon’s transfer class is small, but the 10-player group packs a punch. The star is World, maybe the best overall player in this year’s portal. Pregnon will slot into the interior of the line and contend for all-conference accolades. Hughes is a difference-making running back who went for a combined 2,779 yards and 22 rushing scores the past two seasons.

4. Mississippi

Top three transfers: OL Patrick Kutas (Arkansas), EDGE Princewill Umanmielen (Nebraska), TE Luke Hasz (Arkansas).

The two Arkansas transfers will play huge roles for a team with genuine playoff credentials. While not a finished product, Umanmielen flashed in spurts for the Cornhuskers. Lane Kiffin was able to bring in a bunch of receivers to help new quarterback Austin Simmons, including Harrison Wallace III (Penn State) and De’Zhaun Stribling (Oklahoma State).

5. Missouri

Top three transfers: EDGE Damon Wilson II (Georgia), WR Kevin Coleman Jr. (Mississippi State), QB Beau Pribula (Penn State).

Pribula is the marquee transfer after playing well in relief of Drew Allar last season. His ability to handle the load as the starter should define Missouri’s 2025 season. Overall, Missouri continues to do very well finding high-impact, day-one starters in the portal, including Wilson and Coleman from within the SEC and edge rusher Nate Johnson (Appalachian State) and running back Ahmad Hardy (Louisiana-Monroe) from the Group of Five.

6. Miami (Fla.)

Top three transfers: QB Carson Beck (Georgia), CB Xavier Lucas (Wisconsin), CB Charles Brantley (Michigan State).

The quality of this transfer class may not be determined until Beck shows he has recovered from last season’s arm injury and can reclaim his place among the top NFL draft prospects at the position. The class will also provide a major upgrade at cornerback. Brantley is scheduled to compete for one of the starting jobs once he gets healthy; he’ll miss the spring dealing with a leg injury suffered late last year. Lucas ended up at Miami after a controversial exit from Wisconsin and has the tools to develop into a stopper on the outside.

7. Auburn

Top three transfers: WR Eric Singleton Jr. (Georgia Tech), OL Xavier Chaplin (Virginia Tech), OL Mason Murphy (Southern California).

This group will help transform the offense. Former Oklahoma quarterback Jackson Arnold is the expected to grab the starting job, though his returns with the Sooners fell short of expectations. Arnold will be able to throw to holdover Cam Coleman and newcomers in Singleton and Wake Forest receiver transfer Horatio Fields. The defensive haul lacks the same type of impactful transfers but has several younger players with the potential to develop nicely, including LSU linebacker transfer Xavier Atkins.

8. Florida State

Top three transfers: WR Duce Robinson (Southern California), EDGE James Williams (Nebraska), OL Luke Petitbon (Wake Forest).

There are fewer headliners in this year’s class than in the recent past, which may not be a bad thing after last season’s top-ranked transfer group flopped on arrival. Players such as Williams could supply a huge spark in rotational roles; the Nebraska transfer would be a weapon on third down, for example. The class also features a new starting quarterback in Boston College transfer Thomas Castellanos, who played under new Florida State coordinator Gus Malzahn at Central Florida.

9. Nebraska

Top three transfers: OL Elijah Pritchett (Alabama), WR Dane Key (Kentucky), OL Rocco Spindler (Notre Dame).

The Cornhuskers acquired two plug-and-play offensive linemen in Pritchett and Spindler, with Pritchett set to step in at left tackle. Key should be the team’s leading receiver, while young Kentucky transfer Hardley Gilmore might take a year to develop. Nebraska also added one of top Group of Five defenders in former Georgia Southern linebacker Marques Watson-Trent and some needed flexibility in the back seven in Oklahoma transfer Dasan McCullough.

10. Wisconsin

Top three transfers: QB Billy Edwards Jr. (Maryland), TE Tanner Koziol (Ball State), DL Parker Petersen (Tulane).

Wisconsin lost several key pieces to the portal, including Lucas, running back Tawee Walker (Cincinnati) and wide receiver Will Pauling (Notre Dame). The Badgers could offset those departures with an 18-member transfer class headlined by the in-conference addition at quarterback and a potential breakout talent in Koziol. Idaho wide receiver transfer Mark Hamper averaged 20.1 yards per catch last season and could provide a major spark to the passing game.

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The three-time All-Pro receiver has agreed to a deal with the Los Angeles Rams. The team announced the deal late Sunday night.

Adams has been a consistent receiver over the years, positing five-straight seasons with at least 1,000 yards and came just three yards short in 2019 of making it seven straight. That has remained the case despite playing with multiple different quarterbacks since his departure from the Green Bay Packers ahead of the 2022 season.

He eventually told the Las Vegas Raiders that he preferred to be traded in an effort to reunite with Aaron Rodgers on the New York Jets in 2024.

Vegas was in the midst of finding a quarterback solution in the post-Derek Carr years, something that hurt Adams’ statistically.

Adams played in just 11 games for the Jets before the team opted to release him, announcing the move in early March. It came as a result of the team’s decision to part ways with Rodgers following the arrival of Aaron Glenn and Darren Mougey as head coach and general manager.

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Does the College Football Playoff appropriately award strength of schedule? That’s a factor being debated as SEC decides schedule format.
CFP selection committee does value strength of schedule – just not as much as some within the SEC would like.
SEC has considered going to nine conference games for more than a decade but has always stayed at eight. The SEC’s 2026 schedule format remains undecided.

Ah, spring. The flowers bloom, the pollen makes us sneeze, we bust out shorts as soon as the temps hit 60 degrees, and the SEC bigwigs debate whether to add a ninth conference game to the schedule.

These traditions must never die.

SEC schools are rekindling their annual scheduling dialogue, a conversation that keeps bubbling up, going on more than a dozen years now. The SEC will play eight conference games next season. The 2026 schedule remains undrawn. SEC schools will vote later this year whether to stay at eight or increase to nine conference games in 2026.

What’s the holdup in going to nine conference games? Well, some within the conference believe the College Football Playoff committee does not assign enough reward to strength of schedule when selecting playoff teams.

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey wants nine conference games, but some athletics directors feel squeamish about risking another loss, after the first 12-team playoff included no three-loss teams.

“Trying to understand how the selection committee for the CFP made decisions is really important,” Sankey said last week on “The Paul Finebaum Show.”

“One of the issues in the room for our athletics directors is, what seemed to matter most (to the selection committee) is the number to the right – the number of losses.

“I think (nine conference games) can be positive for a lot of reasons. You watch the interest around conference games. But, not if that causes us to lose (postseason) opportunities.”

Round and round we go, debating whether the juice of another conference game is worth the squeeze.

SPRING POWER RANKINGS: Big Ten | SEC | ACC | Big 12

LOOKING AHEAD: Our way-too-early college football Top 25 for 2025

Greg Sankey: CFP committee didn’t ignore SEC schedule strength

Let’s clarify a few portions of this debate. The CFP selection committee does value strength of schedule – just not as much as some within the SEC would like. And, not enough to make up for SEC teams losing multiple games to mediocre or bad teams.

Meanwhile, the 2026 playoff format remains undecided, complicating scheduling decisions.

I understand the hesitance to add a ninth conference game. In most cases, that would increase a team’s schedule difficulty, and the cleanest avenue to playoff qualification from a Power Four conference remains going undefeated or suffering just one loss.

Record matters. How could it not? If teams simply got rewarded for losing to tough opponents, the first 12-team playoff would have included 10-loss Mississippi State, which played a brutal schedule.

While record matters, the committee honored schedule strength in its rankings, too. How else do you explain one-loss Indiana being seeded behind four two-loss at-large qualifiers, a list that included two SEC teams? The committee recognized that Indiana played a squishy schedule, but it couldn’t completely ignore a Big Ten team with an 11-1 record on selection day.

“As I recall, we had three-loss teams from the SEC ahead of some two-loss teams from significant conferences,” Sankey told Finebaum, “so I will note there was a recognition on the part of the selection committee on the strength of our league.”

Bingo. Alabama ranked ahead of Miami and Brigham Young on selection day, despite having an inferior record. Mississippi and South Carolina also outranked BYU.

Strength of schedule kept Alabama and Ole Miss in the mix on selection day despite their losses to Vanderbilt and Kentucky, respectively.

So, let’s extinguish this lingering narrative that the CFP ignored schedule strength.

If the playoff featured 14 teams instead of 12 – it might by 2026 – then Alabama would have become the first three-loss qualifier in playoff history. All because off its strength of schedule.

Schedule matters, but so do results.

Alabama lost to two average teams, Vanderbilt and Oklahoma, among its three losses. Ole Miss lost to three teams that finished the season unranked, including pitiful Kentucky.

At 9-3, with unattractive losses on the résumé, each team narrowly missed qualification.

Seven teams managed to beat Oklahoma last season. If Alabama had joined that list, we wouldn’t be having this debate. The Tide would have been in the playoff, giving the SEC four qualifiers, and SMU would have been out.

But, because Oklahoma beat Alabama like a drum, we’re debating whether the selection committee needs to award more credit to a team’s schedule.

Here’s an idea: Want to make the playoff? Don’t lose to Vanderbilt or Kentucky.

Schedule strength only one side of College Football Playoff selection coin

Still, in some corners of the SEC, appetite seems lacking for an additional conference game.

Strength of schedule “needs to be recognized and not have it be two vs. three losses, one vs. two losses, whatever that looks like, as the deciding factor,” Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne recently told reporters. “Not all schedules are created the same.”

True, and not all losses are created the same. Indiana didn’t lose to either Vanderbilt or by 21 points to Oklahoma. Nor did it lose on its home field to putrid Kentucky.

But, the SEC schedule debate continues, because it’s spring, and this marks tradition. Perhaps, there’s a way for the SEC to finally rule on its its 2026 conference schedule.

“Maybe we’ll flip a coin over eight or nine (conference games),” Sankey joked with Finebaum. “ … There are two sides to every coin.”

Indeed, and there are multiple sides to playoff selection. It’s not a one-sided coin determined exclusively by schedule strength.

Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network’s national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@gannett.com and follow him on X @btoppmeyer. Subscribe to read all of his columns.

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