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DALLAS — Representatives from Notre Dame and college football’s 10 Bowl Subdivision conferences did not reach an agreement on the 2025 College Football Playoff format after gathering for over seven hours inside the Grand Hyatt at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport Tuesday.

Multiple conference commissioners said the group could meet again in March.

Both Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti and SEC commissioner Greg Sankey told reporters after a meeting in New Orleans last week that they believe the way the CFP seeds its participants must change. Neither stopped to speak to the gathered media on Tuesday, but ACC commissioner Jim Phillips said that the group discussed the issue of seeding at the end of the meeting.

That discussion did not yield a decision.

The distribution of first-round byes forms the crux of the seeding issue. Under the 12-team playoff format deployed in 2024, four byes were awarded to the conference champions ranked highest by the CFP selection committee. Last season, those four teams were Oregon (Big Ten), Georgia (SEC), Boise State (Mountain West) and Arizona State (Big 12).

Had byes been distributed only according to the final CFP rankings, Oregon (Big Ten), Georgia (SEC), Texas (SEC) and Penn State (Big Ten) would have been the committee’s picks.

Sporting fairness is not the only force driving the issue. The SEC and Big Ten are financially incentivized to negotiate for a more favorable setup as it relates to first-round byes. In 2024, conferences received $4 million for each of their members that cracked the field and another $4 million for every school that reached the quarterfinals. The four teams with byes earned a free ticket into that round.

‘I think it’s too early,’ Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark said. ‘The CFP’s going to run some models and then come back to us next month.’

Any change to the College Football Playoff format in 2025 requires the unanimous consent of the 10 FBS commissioners ‒ and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua. Changing the format for 2026 will not require unanimous consent.

According to College Football Playoff executive director Rich Clark, the group did not discuss the 2026 playoff format at Tuesday’s meeting.

Commissioners from the ACC, Big 12, MAC and American Athletic Conference declined to say what ‒ if anything ‒ might compel them to agree to the seeding change the Big Ten and SEC are pushing for, citing the need to gather further information.

Clark said the College Football Playoff would begin gathering the data the commissioners requested as early as Wednesday. Everyone who spoke to the media after the meeting declined to get into specifics on the data they wanted to review.

‘Some of it’s historic, some of it’s data, some of it is just understanding how things happened last year and even previous years so that we can take a good look back and make good decisions,’ Clark said.

Clark said the group is hoping to have a decision made on the 2025 format ‘soon.’

‘For (2025), that’s obviously the most pressing, because that’s for next season,’ he said. ‘We’re hoping that if we can get together next month that we can come to some decisions on 2025. For (2026), we have a little bit more time for that, but we want to get there, too. It’s important that we make these decisions for 25 now, because they’re going to impact what happens in 26 and beyond.’

Reach Texas Insider David Eckert via email at deckert@gannett.com

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For a second consecutive week, there’s a change at the top of the USA TODAY Sports women’s basketball coaches poll. It took two overtime periods and a raucous atmosphere, but Notre Dame’s stay at No. 1 this time around lasted for just one week after a loss to North Carolina State.

Texas will now take a turn as the highest-ranked squad in the nation. The Longhorns, who becomes the fifth different team to occupy the No. 1 position this season, received 22 of 31 first-place votes and head the coaches poll for the first time in program history. The first coaches poll began in 2003-04. season Texas was ranked No. 1 in the media poll prior to that season.

UCLA is back up to No. 2, claiming seven first-place nods, though the Bruins narrowly survived at Iowa on Sunday at nearly the same time as Notre Dame was upended at North Carolina State. Southern California climbs to No. 3 with a single first-place vote on the eve of its rematch with UCLA. Notre Dame retains a top vote but falls to No. 4 overall.

TOP 25: Complete USA TODAY Sports women’s basketball poll

The next three positions remain unchanged as Connecticut, South Carolina and LSU hold serve. No. 8 TCU and No. 9 North Carolina each climb a spot, and North Carolina State vaults into the top 10 after toppling the Fighting Irish.

Georgia Tech is the lone team dropping out of the rankings. Oklahoma State joins at No. 23.

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It comes as a result of an altercation in the departure area of Denver International Airport, according to a Denver Police probable cause statement obtained by NBC 9News in Denver.

Wilhoite appeared in court Monday, where he was advised of the charges. Court records show that bail was set at $5,000 bond or $500 cash. The coach opted for the cash option, posting the $500 and was later released.

USA TODAY Sports reached out to Wilhoite’s attorney for comment.

The incident occurred at the airport on Sunday when Wilhoite left his 2021 Ford Bronco unattended. Upon returning to the vehicle, an officer approached the coach, telling him he couldn’t leave the car like that.

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‘Shut the (expletive) up,’ Wilhoite told the officer, according to the probable cause statement. The officer repeated to Wilhoite that he could not leave his vehicle unattended and the coach had the same reply, proceeding to bump the officer in the chest.

The officer gave Wilhoite a return shove, resulting in the coach punching the officer, who fell to the ground.

Wilhoite proceeded to get back in his car when the officer used his Taser on the Broncos’ coach. After that, Wilhoite drove away and was later arrested.

‘We are aware of a situation involving Michael Wilhoite that occurred Sunday and are in the process of gathering more information,’ the Broncos said in a statement.

The coach just wrapped up his second season with the Broncos after joining Sean Payton’s staff ahead of the 2023 season. The 38-year-old previously worked for Payton in New Orleans as a defensive and special teams assistant from 2019-20. He then went on to coach linebackers for the Los Angeles Chargers from 2021-22 before rejoining Payton again.

Wilhoite played six seasons in the NFL after going undrafted out of Division II Washburn University, playing five seasons with the San Francisco 49ers and one year with the Seattle Seahawks.

Documents show Wilhoite is expected to appear in court again on March 10.

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Inter Miami stars Lionel Messi and Luis Suarez have been fined an undisclosed amount by Major League Soccer’s Disciplinary Committee following separate incidents during the club’s season opener, the league announced Tuesday.

After the final whistle blew in the 2-2 draw Saturday, Messi squeezed the back of the neck of New York City FC coach Mehdi Ballouchy, causing the coach to clench his shoulders while looking back at the Argentine World Cup champion. Video of the incident went viral during the opening weekend of the 2025 MLS season.  

Consider the fine a slap on the wrist — or a squeeze to the neck, if you will — for Messi, the reigning MLS MVP in his first discipline from the league since his monumental arrival in July 2023.

Messi and Suarez both violated the hands to the face/head/neck of an opponent policy, the MLS disciplinary committee’s announcement said.

Suarez grabbed the back of New York City defender Birk Risa’s neck after the halftime whistle as both players argued on the pitch before teammates intervened.

Messi, Suarez and Sergio Busquets were among Inter Miami players who contested a NYCFC player should have received a second yellow card and an ejection before halftime during the game.

An immediate red card was issued to Inter Miami’s Toto Aviles in the 23rd minute, forcing Inter Miami to play with just 10 players for most of the match.

Messi had two assists against New York City — one in the fifth minute to Aviles, and one in the 100th minute to Telasco Segovia to salvage the club’s home opener. A fuming Messi received a yellow card from the lead official as the match ended.

Ballouchy started a conversation with Messi near the sideline after the card was pulled. Inter Miami assistant Javier Morales also approached Ballouchy as Messi briefly walked away before turning back toward Ballouchy and then squeezing the back of his neck.

Messi will play for Inter Miami play in its Concacaf Champions Cup on Tuesday night against Sporting Kansas City, leading the first-round series 1-0 in aggregate score.

Inter Miami’s next MLS match is on the road against Houston Dynamo on March 2, in the second edition of MLS and Apple TV’s ‘Sunday Night Soccer’ showcase.

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After 25 years of dominating basketball courts, from college to the WNBA to the Olympics, Diana Taurasi is finally calling it a career.

The former UConn star announced her retirement on Tuesday. Taurasi is undoubtedly one of the greatest basketball players the world has ever seen. Her stats back up that claim up.

Taurasi retires as the WNBA’s scoring leader by a wide margin, nearly 3,000 points ahead of second-place Tina Charles. She’s been part of some of the greatest teams of all-time and helped build dynasties.

Here’s a quick look at her two-plus-decade basketball career, by the numbers:

Diana Taurasi by the numbers

Olympic gold medals … 6 (most in Olympic basketball)
NCAA championships … 3
WNBA championships … 3
Career points … 10,646 (ranks first in WNBA)
All-WNBA selections … 14 (first in WNBA)
WNBA All-Star selections … 11 (second in WNBA)
Career 3-pointers made … 1,447 (first in WNBA)
Field goals made … 3,341 (first in WNBA)
Scoring titles … 5 (first in WNBA)
Seasons played … 20 (first in WNBA)
Career Assists … 2,394 (fourth in WNBA)
Steals … 518 (18th in WNBA)

When did Diana Taurasi win her last championship?

Taurasi’s latest championship came in 2014. That same year, Taurasi finished second in MVP voting, averaging 16.2 points per game.

Even into her age-42 season, Taurasi only ever averaged fewer than 14 points per game once (2019). Taurasi had offseason back surgery ahead of that season and dealt with a hamstring injury during the season as well. She played only six games that year.

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The Los Angeles Lakers and Dallas Mavericks square off in a game that has a major emotional tie on Tuesday, that would be superstar Luka Doncic.

The NBA’s trade season culminated in a seismic trade that sent the beloved Mavs superstar, Doncic, to L.A. in exchange for Lakers big man Anthony Davis. The trade and its unfolding ramifications have been massive, expecially for Dallas fans still left scratching their collective heads.

Just three weeks removed from the trade, Doncic will suit up for his fifth game in purple and gold. It marks the first time he faces his former team.

Follow along as USA TODAY will provide updates and highlights from what is sure to be an electric night from Los Angeles.

What time is the Lakers game tonight?

Luka Doncic suits up for the Los Angeles Lakers in his first clash with the Dallas Mavericks since the trade that sent him west. The game starts at 10 p.m. ET with coverage on TNT.

All times Eastern.

Game starts: 10 p.m. ET

Lakers vs. Mavericks TV channel: How to watch

TV channel: TNT and TruTV

Lakers vs. Mavericks stream: How to stream Luka Doncic game

The game will be carried on Max. You can also watch on Sling.

Watch NBA games on TNT with Sling

Is LeBron James playing tonight?

Yes. Los Angeles Lakers star forward LeBron James has been upgraded to available against the Dallas Mavericks on Tuesday. James was initially listed on the injury report for left foot injury management, an issue that sidelined him for the Lakers’ Feb. 8 win over the Indiana Pacers and the 2025 All-Star Game on Feb. 16.

Watch: Jordan releases new Luka Doncic commercial

Luka Doncic’s highly-anticipated matchup against his former team on Tuesday has spawned a new Jordan Brand advertisement. The sports apparel company released an ad that features Doncic swapping out a Texas license plate on his purple-and-yellow sports car for a California license plate, symbolizing his new home with the Los Angeles Lakers. The ad is set to the tune of George Strait’s “All My Ex’s Live in Texas,” a nod to Doncic’s contentious departure from the Dallas Mavericks. 

The ad closes with the message, ‘Full tank. No mercy.”  

Doncic signed an endorsement deal with Air Jordan in December 2019. 

Kyrie Irving visits Kobe and Gigi Bryant statue 

Ahead of the Mavericks’ matchup against the Lakers on Tuesday, Kyrie Irving paid tribute to the late Kobe and Gigi Bryant by visiting their statue outside the Crypto.com Arena. The statue depicts Bryant kissing the top of Gianna’s head as they sat courtside at a Lakers game in December 2019, less than a month before their tragic deaths.

“(Bryant) was a genuine friend, a genuine big brother, and losing someone like that was one of the hardest things to deal with, to grieve over it,” Irving said of Bryant in November. 

Why was Luka Doncic traded to the Lakers?

‘A lot happened quickly when news broke that Dončić would be joining the Lakers, with both players surfacing in their new cities within days. Then came the reports and speculation about why this deal happened, and why the Mavericks ultimately elected to move on from Dončić, a 25-year-old superstar seemingly about to enter the prime of his career. leading up to this moment. There was delight from Lakers fans, disgust from lots of Mavericks fans, and an infusion of interest and curiosity from diehard and casual NBA fans alike.’ — Mark Giannotto

Who won the Lakers-Mavericks Luka Doncic trade?

‘Luka Doncic has played four games for the Los Angeles Lakers, and Anthony Davis has played one game for the Dallas Mavericks since the blockbuster trade between the two teams involving those two All-Stars […]

‘It’s still early, and sweeping conclusions are unjustified, but so far, the Lakers have won the trade – on the court and in the court of public opinion.’ — Jeff Zillgitt

Luka Doncic stats: Points and more since joining Lakers

Games: 4
Points/Game: 19
Rebounds/Game: 7.5
Assists/Game: 5.8
FG%: 38.8
3PT%: 27.3
Minutes/Game: 27.8

Predictions for Mavericks vs. Lakers:

Sporting News: Lakers 115, Mavs 110

Sloan Piva writes, ‘LA should dictate the pace at home – it has scored 25.6 fast-break points per game over the past three games (best in the NBA in that stretch) – and we like unsung heroes like Jaxson Hayes and Jarred Vanderbilt to play big parts down low against the Mavs’ injury-plagued front court. 

‘Don’t fall into the trap of laying the points with LA, though. Pride is at stake for Jason Kidd’s team, and the Mavs sit top-eight in a loaded West for a reason. They’re 7-1 against the spread over their past eight games, and likely pissed off after taking their worst loss in that stretch their last time out. They might not come out of Los Angeles with a win, but they also probably won’t get wiped out completely by the Don and his new family.’

DeMarcus Cousins: Luka will feast

During an appearance on television, Cousins said, ‘I know how I felt when I made my return to the team that traded me. I was a shark in bloody water. I expect nothing less from Luka. I think it’s gonna be a lot of emotion. I think it’ll be a lot of antics. And I think he’s coming out firing right away. I think he’s gonna try to make a statement.’

FanDuel: Lakers to win

FanDuel gives the Lakers a 57.9% chance of winning Tuesday’s game. Furthermore, FanDuel also points out that the Lakers have a stellar 16-10 record against the spread when playing at home.

Odds, lines for Mavericks vs. Lakers:

*All odds via BetMGM

The Los Angeles Lakers are favorites to defeat Dallas in Tuesday’s NBA matchup, according to the BetMGM basketball odds. Looking to wager? Check out the best mobile sports betting apps offering sports betting promos in 2024.

Odds as of Monday evening.

Spread: Lakers (-9.5)
Moneylines: Lakers (-425); Mavericks (+320)
Over/under: 230.5

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Will President Donald Trump invite the Philadelphia Eagles to the White House or won’t he?

That was the question on the minds of many after the Philadelphia Eagles crushed the two-time defending champion Kansas City Chiefs to win Super Bowl LIX earlier this month.

Turns out he will.

Trump ended the speculation from the Oval Office on Tuesday, saying the winning NFL team would be invited.

“I thought it was a great performance by them,” he said. “And absolutely they’ll be extended that invitation.”

Trump then directed White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt to offer the invitation “right away,” adding, “We’re gonna do it sometime today.”

While championship teams in major professional and college sports leagues have visited the White House for decades, the traditional visits became more sporadic − and controversial − during Trump’s first term, in part because of public criticism he levied against specific leagues and groups of athletes.

NBA teams, whose players are predominantly Black, either were not invited to visit the White House or declined to attend during Trump’s first term.

For NFL teams, the visits became especially fraught after Trump repeatedly blasted the league and players who kneeled during the national anthem to protest racial inequality. Only one of the four teams that won a Super Bowl during Trump’s first term in office made a trip to the White House (the New England Patriots, in 2017).

The Eagles were slated to visit with Trump after their Super Bowl win in 2018 until the White House withdrew its invitation on the eve of the scheduled ceremony. NFL Network reported at the time that Philadelphia had planned to send a contingent of fewer than 10 players to the ceremony, and then-White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders publicly accused the team of trying to pull ‘a political stunt.’

The White House instead hosted a brief, awkward event the next day that it described as a celebration of America. The South Lawn event amounted to the playing of the Star-Spangled Banner and God Bless America and brief remarks from Trump − but no members of the team.

Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy is a White House Correspondent for USA TODAY. You can follow her on X @SwapnaVenugopal

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TAMPA, Fla. — They finally ended a 15-year World Series absence, but scattering for the winter without the Commissioner’s Trophy in hand provided a cruel reminder for the New York Yankees: Pushing the boulder farther up the hill only makes it roll back down even harder.

Ninety-four wins and American League division and championship series conquests of Kansas City and Cleveland soured after a five-game World Series loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers – particularly since they did not look good doing so.

Reunited yet down one generational superstar, the reloaded Yankees are now tasked with turning the nightmare fuel of a Game 5 collapse into propellant.

“You compete your [expletive] off all year,” ace Gerrit Cole told USA TODAY Sports. “You compete your [expletive] off through the DS, through the CS, and you’re competing your [expletive] off in the World Series, too. But you finish second. You lose.

“I think there’s a blend, in each of us, a sense of accomplishment but also sense that we didn’t finish. And we especially didn’t finish the way we wanted to. We wanted to play better. And we didn’t.

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“Guys are grabbing fuel from both ends of the spectrum. We did push this farther than we have pushed this. And yet our goal was not accomplished.”

The desultory decisive game – marked by crucial mistakes from franchise player Aaron Judge (dropped fly ball), shortstop Anthony Volpe (poor throw) and Cole (late covering first base from the mound) – should have been exacerbated by offseason heartbreak.

After all, following one season in the Bronx in which he formed, with Judge, one of the great 1-2 punches in baseball history, Juan Soto crossed town to the Mets for a $765 million contract. A one-year trial with Soto nearly produced a World Series championship and nearly produced a long-term union.

Instead, the Yankees got neither.

Yet the group that has reassembled at Steinbrenner Field has been galvanized, in part by October lessons learned and most notably by the Yankees’ quick-twitch reaction after Soto’s defection.

Left-hander Max Fried: Signed to a $218 million deal just a day after the Mets edged the Yankees at the tape for Soto’s services.

Closer Devin Williams: Acquired in trade from Milwaukee Brewers on Dec. 13.

Center fielder Cody Bellinger: Acquired in trade from Chicago Cubs on Dec. 17.

First baseman Paul Goldschmidt: Signed to one-year deal on Dec. 21.

In less than two weeks, the Yankees lost the Soto Shuffle but turned a Pinstripe Pivot into legitimate dreams in 2025, adding a World Series-winning pitcher, a pair of former MVPs and one of baseball’s premier relievers.

And while Goldschmidt, 37, likely won’t revisit his 2022 NL MVP form, the Yankees have added the game’s best pitcher since 2020 in Fried and a former MVP in Bellinger who won’t turn 30 until July.

The quick strikes were most appreciated by returning Yankees who’d rather not be held hostage by  roster rumblings all winter.

“I don’t want to sit by my phone all day. I’ll wait for some credited sources to come out with real info and other than that I’m not paying too much attention to it,” says pitcher Clarke Schmidt. “We realize every time you go out there, you’re not going to have the same team every year. Especially when you have that big of free agents. Especially the biggest free agent.

“I thought they did a great job. We bolstered the pen. We bolstered the rotation. And the bats we added. They did a really, really good job.”

The relief was palpable for both returning and incoming Yankees.

‘The vibe’s incredible’

Bellinger hit 47 home runs in winning the 2019 MVP, and then helped lead the Dodgers to the shortened-season 2020 World Series title, but not before a forearm bash celebrating a Kiké Hernández NLCS home run sidetracked his career.

Shoulder surgery and then a 2021 hairline fracture in his left fibula robbed him of both his upper and lower halves, resulting in two seasons where he batted a combined .193 with a .611 OPS, and the Dodgers non-tendered him.

The past two seasons were spent reestablishing his value at Wrigley Field, to mixed results: He was a 4.4 WAR player in 2023, signed an $80 million deal with two opt-outs and then tailed off to 2.2 WAR last year.

When the strangely penurious Cubs signaled their intent to trade him, Bellinger geared up. And when it was destination, New York, a player who could be playing the what-if game is instead counting his blessings.

“I kind of knew I was going to get traded so I was like, ‘I hope it’s to a good spot,’” says Bellinger. “The Cubs are a great organization. The Dodgers are a great organization. I wanted to go to a place that was cool.

“This has been amazing. I was so pumped up when I got the call. I’m excited to be here.”

The feeling is mutual. Bellinger remains an elite defender in center field and at first base, his presence enabling Judge, who turns 33 in April, to slide back to right field. He can also spell Goldschmidt at first base.

Meanwhile, the Bellinger-Yankees alliance can truly be mutually beneficial should the lefty slugger properly leverage the short right field porch. Soto didn’t quite turn into Babe Ruth in the Bronx, but he did set career highs with 41 homers and a 178 adjusted OPS, along with a .989 OPS.

Suddenly, batting practice takes on a different meaning for Bellinger who can once again opt out of his contract and test free agency after this season.

“Gotta stay inside the baseball,” he says. “Gotta stay inside my swing.

“Good things could and should happen.”

That feeling extends toward the clubhouse, where Bellinger reports that “the vibe’s incredible,” especially following the lead of Judge, whom he credits with “unmatched” energy and presence.

The infusion of new and very accomplished blood is also highly appreciated among the returners.

“They’re major, major additions,” says Volpe, who posted an .815 OPS with five stolen bases in the Yankees’ postseason run. “Not only to the lineup, to the team, to the field, but the clubhouse. Going forward that’s probably going to be most important.”

Still not over it

Equally important was the Yankees’ nimble winter response. Oh, it won’t qualify as a Dodgers-like splurge: Soto’s $31 million salary is pretty much a wash with Fried’s signing bonus and 2025 salary, and the Yankee payroll will once again land somewhere in the $310 million range.

Yet they remain consensus favorites in an AL East that runs five deep yet lacks a true behemoth – unless you count the Yankees.

“Everything happened pretty fast,” says Volpe of the winter maneuvers. “It’s just a good feeling knowing you’re on a team and in an organization that’s going to do whatever it takes to put us over the edge.

“Besides Judgey, Soto’s the best player, by far, I’ve ever played with. Losing him, you can’t ever replace anything like that. But feeling like you’re in an organization that will invest, it’s a good feeling and makes you want to go out there and win.”  

Says Cole: “There was a lot of decisiveness. There was a concerted contingency plan. And I’m sure they spent a lot of time and focus on Juan. But the speed at which they moved and the areas with which they targeted to improve, it seemed like there was a lot of critical thought going on prior to Juan doing what he decided to do.”

In Fried, the Yankees get the game’s best ERA – 2.81 – among starting pitchers since 2020. His seven-pitch mix will be a significant changeup from the power arms – Cole, Carlos Rodón, Schmidt and Rookie of the Year Luis Gil – the Yankees will trot out the rest of the time.

Cole and Schmidt by turns call Fried “articulate,” “curious” and “team-centric,” and, most important, “elite at run prevention,” as Cole says.

He’ll also come in with a 2021 World Series ring and no memory of the Yankees’ desultory performance in the most recent Fall Classic.

Yet those that return won’t forget, in a season where learning from the past and quickly moving on from it might be the team’s best attribute.

“Some of those feelings, you don’t necessarily get over, ever,” says Volpe. “But I think our team, our clubhouse have done a pretty good job using those things and those feelings to push us to new heights, new things.

“The best part is I don’t think we’ll ever get over that – that team and that bond, knowing we came that close. But looking at it with the perspective that it’s a good thing, and it will help us.”

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The House of Representatives has adopted a resolution that will eventually become a massive multi-trillion-dollar bill full of President Donald Trump’s priorities on the border, defense, energy and taxes.

In a major victory for House GOP leaders, the resolution passed in a 217 to 215 vote.

All Democrats voted against the measure, along with lone Republican rebel Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., who was concerned about its effect on the national deficit.

The next step is now for the relevant House committees to meet and build their own proposals, which will eventually be returned into the framework and negotiated into a compromise deal with the Senate.

It was a dramatic scene in the House chamber on Monday night as Republican leaders delayed formally ending a vote for roughly 45 minutes as they worked to convince conservative fiscal hawks to support the legislation.

Impatient Democrats called out loud for the vote to be closed as Republicans huddled in varied groups.

Two people on the House floor told Fox News Digital that President Donald Trump got involved at one point, speaking to one of the holdouts, Rep. Victoria Spartz, R-Ind., by phone.

Reps. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., and Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, could be seen on the phone at other points on the House floor as well, but it’s not clear if they were speaking with Trump.

At one point, House GOP leaders appeared to lose confidence that they had enough support and abruptly canceled the planned vote. 

Moments later, however, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle were rushing back to the House floor and Fox News Digital was told the vote would be held.

Meanwhile, three House Democrats who had been absent early in the day returned for the Tuesday evening vote in dramatic fashion. 

Rep. Brittany Pettersen, D-Colo., who had a baby roughly a month ago, returned to the House floor with her infant to oppose the bill. And Rep. Kevin Mullin, R-Calif., who was recently hospitalized for an infection, appeared in the chamber aided by a walker.

House and Senate Republicans are aiming to use their majorities to advance Trump’s agenda via the budget reconciliation process. 

It’s a Senate maneuver that lowers the threshold for passage from two-thirds to a simple majority, but it’s used when a party controls both houses of Congress and the White House because it allows that party to pass its policy goals even under the slimmest margins.

And Republicans are dealing with slim margins indeed; with current numbers, the House GOP can afford no more than one defection to pass anything without Democratic votes if all liberals are voting.

On the Senate side, Republicans can lose no more than two of their own in the reconciliation process.

The House resolution aimed to increase spending on border security, the judiciary and defense by roughly $300 billion, while seeking at least $1.5 trillion to $2 trillion in spending cuts elsewhere. 

As written, the House bill also provided $4.5 trillion to extend President Donald Trump’s 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act provisions, which expire at the end of this year.

An amendment negotiated by House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, and conservatives on his panel would also force lawmakers to make $2 trillion in cuts, or else risk the $4.5 trillion for Trump’s tax cuts getting reduced by the difference. 

The resolution also fulfilled Trump’s directive to act on the debt limit, raising it by $4 trillion or roughly two years. 

A bipartisan deal struck in 2023 saw the debt limit suspended until January 2025. Now, projections show the U.S. could run out of cash to pay its debts by spring if Congress does not act.

The resolution’s odds were touch and go for much of the week so far, since House lawmakers returned from a week-long recess period Monday.

Several fiscal conservatives had demanded more assurances from House GOP leadership that Republicans would seek deep spending cuts to offset the cost of Trump’s priorities.

Republican lawmakers in more competitive districts are concerned some cuts may go too far, however. 

The resolution directs the House Energy & Commerce Committee to find at least $880 billion in spending cuts – which those lawmakers fear will mean severe cuts for federal programs like Medicaid.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., pushed back against fears of such cuts during his weekly press conference on Tuesday.

‘Medicaid is hugely problematic because it has a lot of fraud, waste and abuse. Everybody knows that. We all know it intuitively. No one in here would disagree,’ Johnson said. ‘What we’re talking about is rooting out the fraud, waste, and abuse. It doesn’t matter what party you’re in, you should be for that because it saves your money, and it preserves the programs so that it is available for the people who desperately need it.’

It was also supported by a wide swath of Republicans, including conservative Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas, a member of the House Budget Committee that approved the bill earlier this month.

‘It’s the best bill we’re going to get,’ Gill said while praising Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, for his efforts. ‘If I were writing it then I’d write it differently, but this is the best we’re gonna get it.’

Rep. Randy Feenstra, R-Iowa, said he was eager to begin working on ‘cutting taxes for Iowans, securing our border, unleashing American energy production, and eliminating waste and fraud in our government.’

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White House officials confirmed with Fox News that while billionaire Elon Musk is overseeing the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), an acting administrator has been appointed to the role.

Amy Gleason, who is a low-profile executive with an expertise in healthcare technology, has been appointed as the acting leader of DOGE, the department responsible for gutting many federal agencies while locating and cutting billions of dollars in government waste.

Gleason’s identity was revealed after a reporter pressed White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt on who is actually running DOGE.

CBS News’ Nancy Cordes pointed out to Leavitt that President Donald Trump’s executive order to create DOGE called for the naming of a DOGE administrator. She then asked the president’s spokesperson who is serving as the DOGE administrator.

‘So, the president tasked Elon Musk to oversee the DOGE effort,’ Leavitt said. ‘There are career officials and there are political appointees who are helping run DOGE on a day-to-day basis.

‘There are also individuals who have onboarded as political appointees at every agency across the board to work alongside President Trump’s Cabinet to find and identify waste, fraud and abuse, and they are working on that effort every day.’

Cordes quickly asked, ‘So, is Elon Musk the administrator?’ as Leavitt twice called on another reporter.

After the exchange, Fox News learned of Gleason’s temporary appointment.

Gleason, 53, worked from 2018 through 2021 for the United States Digital Service, an agency that has been renamed the US DOGE Service, according to her LinkedIn profile. In that role, she worked with the White House on the federal response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Gleason returned to the agency after Trump’s return to the Oval Office in January.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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