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A federal judge appointed by Ronald Reagan has made headlines this year for penning some of the most blistering opinions against President Donald Trump’s executive orders — including in one case where he was criticized by two Supreme Court justices for failing to adhere to the high court’s emergency guidance. 

U.S. District Judge William Young, a Reagan appointee, has spent nearly four decades on the federal bench. He most recently authored a scathing, 161-page opinion on Tuesday in a case involving Trump’s attempts to deport and crack down on pro-Palestinian protesters and activists on college campuses.

Young said the Trump administration’s actions were illegal and an unconstitutional violation of free speech protections under the First Amendment. He also used the decision to criticize, at some length, Trump’s broader conduct, which he described as ‘bullying.’

Trump, Young argued, is a president who fundamentally misunderstands the country he was elected to serve. Young described Trump as focused largely on ‘hollow bragging’ and on ‘retribution’ at all costs.

‘Yet government retribution for speech (precisely what has happened here) is directly forbidden by the First Amendment,’ Young quipped.

It’s not the first time Young has raised eyebrows for his public dressing-down of the commander in chief. 

Young in June ruled that the Trump administration acted illegally when it slashed funding for research grants at the National Institutes of Health, siding with the grant recipients and ordering the funding be restored. He also used the opinion to describe the cuts as ‘appalling’ evidence of what he said was ‘racial discrimination’ and ‘discrimination against the LGBTQ community.’

‘That’s what this is,’ Young said at the time, adding that, in his decades on the federal bench, he had ‘never seen government racial discrimination like this.’

‘I would be blind not to call it out,’ he said, adding later, ‘Have we no shame?’

The Trump administration appealed Young’s injunction to the First Circuit Court of Appeals, which declined to stay the ruling while the case continued to play out.

However, the Supreme Court voted 5-4 in August to lift the injunction — and two justices took that opportunity to chastise Young, at least to some degree, for the manner in which he went about issuing the opinion.

Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh chastised Young for failing to adhere to an emergency ruling the court granted in April, which allowed Trump to follow through with slashing tens of millions of dollars in education grants for funding so-called diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. 

 ‘When this Court issues a decision, it constitutes a precedent that commands respect in lower courts,’ Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh said in the August opinion.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, in writing the dissent, appeared to sympathize with Young’s view, noting at one point: ‘Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules,’ she said. ‘We seem to have two: that one, and this administration always wins.’

Young, for his part, apologized for the error. But it appears to have done little to quell his desire to speak out on what he argued Tuesday is Trump’s apparent disregard for free speech protections. 

‘I fear President Trump believes the American people are so divided that today they will not stand up, fight for, and defend our most precious constitutional values so long as they are lulled into thinking their own personal interests are not affected,’ Young said Tuesday, before adding: ‘Is he correct?’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

It’s time for the NBA preseason, and the action began halfway around the world in 2025.

The New York Knicks beat the Philadelphia 76ers, 99-84, in the first of two NBA preseason games at Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates on Thursday, Oct. 2 as part of the league’s season-long initiative to play international showcases. The two teams will face one another again on Saturday, Oct. 4, before returning to the United States for the remainder of the preseason. Both the Sixers and Knicks were permitted to begin their training camps last week due to international travel.

The Knicks are coming off their deepest playoff run since 1999, but fired former coach Tom Thibodeau after they were eliminated by the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference Finals. This will be new coach Mike Brown’s first unofficial game implementing a more up-tempo style with Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and the rest of the returning New York nucleus that’s again a top contender to make it to the NBA Finals out of the East.

The 76ers had a disastrous, injury-marred 2024-25 season in which franchise cornerstone Joel Embiid hardly played and prized free agent acquisition Paul George missed most of the second half of the campaign. Both are still recovering from knee surgery with no timeline for a return and neither played in Abu Dhabi on Thursday.

FINAL: Knicks, 99, 76ers 84

The Knicks cruised to a win in the 2025 NBA preseason opener in Abu Dhabi, although neither team played its regulars down the stretch. Miles McBride had a team-high 12 points off the bench to lead the Knicks, while Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns each had 11 points playing exclusively in the first half. Mitchell Robinson finished with 16 rebounds and didn’t play after halftime. Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe paced the 76ers with 14 points apiece.

Knicks take huge lead over 76ers into fourth quarter

The Knicks pulled their star players after halftime, but it didn’t stop them from turning this first preseason game into a blowout in the third quarter. New York has used 16 players at this point. The 76ers have used nine. The Knicks’ Garrison Matthews has three 3-pointers to lead the reserves playing in the game at the moment. Tyrese Maxey has 14 points for Philadelphia and VJ Edgecombe has chipped in 13. The Knicks led, 81-57, heading into the fourth quarter, although the Sixers have chipped away a bit at that New York advantage in the opening three minutes of action.

Halftime score: Knicks 53, 76ers 43

The Knicks pulled ahead as the second quarter wore on, with Karl-Anthony Towns and Mikal Bridges each finishing with a team-high 11 points. Mitchell Robinson, meanwhile, already has 16 rebounds in just 18 minutes of action. Both teams got off to a rough shooting start overall, with New York still only 37% from the field after its surge before halftime.

Tyrese Maxey has 12 points to lead Philadelphia and rookie VJ Edgecombe has had several encouraging moments with nine points. It will be interesting to see how much either team plays its starters and key players in the second half since this is the first preseason game after a long flight and another exhibition awaits on Saturday.

Knicks, 76ers in close game during first half

The Sixers and Knicks were tied after the first quarter with New York big man Karl-Anthony Towns and 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey doing the most damage. Miles McBride has a couple 3-pointers and Mitchell Robinson a couple putbacks for the Knicks. VJ Edgecombe’s rookie debut with Philadelphia also appears to be off to a smooth start. The Knicks led, 34-31, with 8:04 to go in the second quarter. Here are some highlights:

Knicks, 76ers make USA TODAY’s NBA top 25 player rankings

There are a couple Knicks and 76ers included in NBA’s top 25 player rankings released by a panel of USA TODAY Sports experts on Thursday. Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns both made the list from New York and Joel Embiid still made the cut despite his injury issues.

Click here to see to complete player ranking list from No. 25 to No. 1

76ers vs. Knicks underway in Abu Dhabi

The 2025-26 season has begun as the first preseason game of the year is off and running between the New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76ers in the United Arab Emirates, and rookie VJ Edgecombe wasted little time making an early impression. About a minute after missing his first shot attempt, he took a defensive rebound away from Knicks center Mitchell Robinson and found teammate Adem Bona for an alley oop in transition. Tyrese Maxey has six quick points and the Sixers are off to an early lead.

76ers vs. Knicks lineups: VJ Edgecombe to start

Tyrese Maxey is the lone member of the Sixers’ star trio in the lineup for today’s preseason opener in Abu Dhabi, but No. 3 overall pick VJ Edgecombe will make his debut in the starting lineup.

The Knicks will trot out most of their regulars to begin Thursday’s game, with Jalen Brunson, Mikal Bridges, Karl-Anthony Towns and Mitchell Robinson all in the starting lineup, according to the New York Post. Pacome Dadiet will start in place of OG Anunoby, who is out with a sprained hand.

When does the NBA preseason begin?

The NBA preseason starts on Thursday, Oct. 2, with the international matchup between the New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76ers. The Knicks and 76ers will play a second game in Abu Dhabi two days later on Saturday, Oct. 4.

What time is Knicks vs. 76ers in NBA Abu Dhabi Games 2025?

The New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers preseason game on Thursday, Oct. 2 as part of the NBA Abu Dhabi games is scheduled to tip off at 12 p.m. ET at Etihad Arena in the United Arab Emirates. The teams will play again on Saturday, Oct. 4 at 11 a.m. ET.

What channel is Knicks vs. 76ers NBA Abu Dhabi preseason game?

The New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers preseason matchup on Thursday, Oct. 2, as part of the NBA Abu Dhabi Games, will be broadcast nationally on NBA TV. It can be live-streamed with Fubo. Their game on Saturday, Oct. 4 in Abu Dhabi will also be broadcast by NBA TV and can be accessed through live stream with Fubo.

Watch NBA Abu Dhabi Games with Fubo

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A new sports trivia game show is being developed by Religion of Sports, a company co-founded by Tom Brady and Michael Strahan.
The show is inspired by the popular online daily trivia game, Immaculate Grid.
The project is in the early stages of development.

A new sports trivia game is being developed for television by Religion of Sports, a company founded by Gotham Chopra and NFL legends Tom Brady and Michael Strahan.

The new sports trivia game, currently in the early planning stages, draws inspiration from the unique daily trivia game Immaculate Grid. Hosted by Sports Reference, this game challenges players to fill out a grid by selecting a player for each cell based on the criteria defined by the row and column of that cell. With nine attempts to complete the grid, each guess – correct or incorrect – contributes to their total score. The game ends after the allowed guesses, and a new grid is released every day at 6 a.m. ET.

‘Immaculate Grid is the online game to play if you’re a serious sports fan. It’s very challenging and very addictive,’ said Victor Buhler, senior vice president of development and production at Religion of Sports. ‘We believe the game can also become a terrific show, a future favorite for sports fans of every stripe.’

The potential TV trivia show project is currently in the early stages of development. At this point, it does not have a confirmed outlet, and other details have not been disclosed.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Fantasy football managers, we have a problem. Week 5 has hit us like a Vita Vea brick wall.

Coming off a week where Matthew Stafford and Dak Prescott were the top point scorers, the volatile QB position is now being wrecked by injuries and the first set of bye weeks. Brock Purdy and likely Lamar Jackson are out. J.J. McCarthy will miss another game. Jordan Love and Caleb Williams are on bye. Jayden Daniels is set to return, but may not be at 100%.

Is there any hope of finding a capable replacement? It’s time to check the weekly rankings to find out.

WEEK 5 BYES: Atlanta, Chicago, Green Bay, Pittsburgh

(Rankings by Elisha Twerski, whose complete Week 5 rankings for every position will be updated up until kickoff on Sunday.)

Fantasy football Week 5 quarterback rankings

(*- double-check status before kickoff)

Josh Allen (BUF) vs. NE
Jalen Hurts (PHI) vs. DEN
Patrick Mahomes II (KC) at JAC
Justin Fields (NYJ) vs. DAL
Jayden Daniels (WAS) at LAC
Drake Maye (NE) at BUF
Justin Herbert (LAC) vs. WAS
Daniel Jones (IND) vs. LV
Baker Mayfield (TB) at SEA
Jared Goff (DET) at CIN
Dak Prescott (DAL) at NYJ
Bo Nix (DEN) at PHI
Kyler Murray (ARI) vs. TEN
Geno Smith (LV) at IND
Jaxson Dart (NYG) at NO
Sam Darnold (SEA) vs. TB
C.J. Stroud (HOU) at BAL
Spencer Rattler (NO) vs. NYG
Matthew Stafford (LAR) vs. SF
Tua Tagovailoa (MIA) at CAR
Trevor Lawrence (JAC) vs. KC
Mac Jones (SF) at LAR
Bryce Young (CAR) vs. MIA
Jake Browning (CIN) vs. DET
Cooper Rush (BAL) vs. HOU
Cam Ward (TEN) at ARI
Dillon Gabriel (CLE) vs. MIN
Carson Wentz (MIN) at CLE
Marcus Mariota (WAS) at LAC
Tyler Shough (NO) vs. NYG

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Dodgers swept the Reds and will now face the Phillies in the NL Division Series.
Rookie Roki Sasaki, who had never pitched in relief until a few weeks ago, suddenly finds himself as the Dodgers’ closer.
The Dodgers are confident in their chances, citing strong starting pitching and a high-scoring offense in recent games.

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Dodgers cut their celebration short Wednesday night after sweeping the Cincinnati Reds, knowing they had to pack their suitcases and be ready for an 11 a.m. flight Thursday, Oct. 2, for Philadelphia.

Their best-of-five NL Division Series could easily be for the World Series, knowing that whoever comes on top should be the favorite the rest of October.

The star-studded Phillies, who finished with 96 victories and beat up the Dodgers two weeks ago, are built for October and will be eagerly waiting after having a first-round bye.

But when the Dodgers board their two charter planes at LAX, they plan to bring along a little surprise with their carry-ons.

They are bringing a 23-year-old rookie who had never pitched a game in relief in his life until a few weeks ago, and suddenly has been anointed their closer – just in time for the powerful Phillies.

Say hello to Roki Sasaki, who pitched a 1-2-3 ninth inning in the Dodgers’ 8-4 victory, throwing 11 pitches, nine for strikes, with nine fastballs hitting at least 100 mph, answering the Dodgers’ prayers with their troubled bullpen.

‘I trust him, and he’s going to be pitching in leverage,’ said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts, who couldn’t have imagined uttering those words even a week ago. ‘The more you pitch guys and play guys, you learn more. I don’t think the moment’s going to be too big for Roki.’

The Dodgers won’t come out and say it publicly, but just like a year ago when they beat the San Diego Padres in the NL Division Series before breezing through October, they believe this could be their World Series.

The Phillies should be their biggest challenge to becoming the first National League team since the Big Red Machine in 1975-76 to win back-to-back World Series titles. Yet, that task will be a lot easier if Sasaki can perform like he has shown the past 10 days.

‘I think we can win it all,’ Roberts said. ‘I think we’re equipped to do that. We certainly have the pedigree. We certainly have the hunger. We’re playing great baseball. And in all honesty, I don’t care who we play, I just want to be the last team standing.’

Who can blame Roberts and his team for believing they’re the best team in baseball? They have won 17 of their last 22 games. Their offense has scored 113 runs in the last 20 games – averaging nearly six runs a game.

‘I think what we’re seeing is winning pitches, using the whole field, fighting and not trying to just slug,’ Roberts said. ‘I think we’re taking team at-bats. Situationally, we’ve been fantastic. … We’re doing whatever it takes. Just team baseball. Team at-bats.’

Oh, yes, there also is that starting pitching. Yoshinobu Yamamoto was the latest Dodger starter to dominate, overpowering the Reds for 6⅔ innings. He is now yielding a 1.34 ERA while striking out 65 in his last 53⅔ innings across eight starts. This comes on the heels of Blake Snell’s brilliant performance in Game 1, who is yielding a 1.03 ERA with 37 strikeouts in his last 26 innings over four starts.

And, there is the Dodgers’ DH, whose side gig is pitching, with Shohei Ohtani tossing 17⅓ shutout innings in his last four starts.

‘Our rotation has been awesome,’ said Andrew Friedman, Dodgers president of baseball operations. ‘What Snell did. What Yamamoto did. What Roki did to finish. We still have some things to work out in the bullpen, but we feel really good about this team.’

The Dodgers are lined up to have their three top starters pitch the first three games with Ohtani starting Game 1 on Saturday, Oct. 4, Snell starting Game 2 on Monday and Yamamoto pitching Game 3 on Wednesday.

The Dodgers went 2-4 during the season against the Phillies and watched Philadelphia celebrate clinching the NL East at Dodger Stadium two weeks ago. The Dodgers will tell you they respect the Phillies. They’ll also tell you there’s no fear. They’d even love to get a little revenge for their predecessors, after the Phillies ended L.A.’s season in 2008 and 2009.

‘When you have talent that’s motivated to win,’ Friedman said, ‘it’s a special combination. I would not bet against them.’

The Dodgers aren’t going all Joe Namath and guaranteeing a World Series championship, but with the way they’re playing, the way that Sasaki has suddenly looked like a different pitcher brimming with confidence, they certainly believe they’re better than the Phillies and anyone else who stands in their way.

‘Obviously I know we can win the whole thing,’ said Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts, who tied a franchise postseason record with three doubles in a game, last accomplished by Jim Gilliam in Game 4 of the 1953 World Series. ‘We just have to play good baseball. We had a lot of struggles really all year. But I think we all view that as just a test to see how we would respond. So now we’re starting to use those tests that we went through earlier to respond now and be ready now.

‘And anything that comes our way, it can’t be worse than what we’ve already went through.’

The Dodgers aren’t trying to sugarcoat their bullpen woes. They blew 27 saves this year. They tried to cough up a 10-2 lead in Game 1, and nearly melted down in the eighth inning Wednesday, even yanking starter-turned-reliever Emmet Sheehan out of the game after getting ahead on a 1-and-2 count.

Yet, just when it could have turned ugly, along came Sasaki to the rescue, suddenly helping squelch fear that their season could be ruined by their bullpen. Sasaki, whose pitching mechanics deteriorated during the season, endured an oblique injury, shoulder soreness and spent four months away from the team. Now he looks as if he’s been a closer his whole life.

‘I think you can definitely tell a different demeanor on the mound,’ Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said, ‘and in this game, sometimes that counts for everything. That’s what I’m seeing. He believes in himself, and we believe in him.’

Perhaps just in the nick of time to face the Phillies, the Beast of the East.

‘I feel like Philly has been playing really good baseball over the last two years,’ Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas said, ‘and they want to be in this spot. We’re the reigning champions. Everybody wants what we have right now. I think Philly is getting ready for us.

‘It’s a great opportunity for us to show what we’re made of.

‘We’re ready.’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The beauty of the NBA is that the debates are democratic. No single person’s opinion carries more weight than another’s.

And the other beautiful part of the NBA is that it is built for rankings — the best players, the best teams, the best eras — no topic is off limits. USA TODAY Sports dropped its Top 25 player rankings for the 2025-26 NBA season Thursday, Oct. 2, coinciding with the tip-off of the NBA preseason.

To come up with our list, we polled 12 of our NBA experts and asked them each to rank their Top 25 players, then used the weighted average of those lists.

Think we got anything wrong? Now, we want to hear from you. We’d love to see your Top 20 ranking, using the field of players from our Top 20. (Yes, just 20 because that’s all we can fit in the interactive ranking tool).

Make your voice heard and cast your vote in the poll at the bottom of this article. Voting closes Thursday, Oct. 9. We’ll share the results in an upcoming article.

USA TODAY Sports Top 25 NBA Player Ranking

Rank your own Top 20 players for the 2025-26 NBA season

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

A new report warns the U.S. nuclear arsenal is dangerously outdated and too small to confront growing global threats — and recommends nearly tripling the number of deployed American warheads by 2050.

The report, first obtained by Fox News Digital, argues that America’s current force of about 1,750 deployed nuclear weapons leaves the nation vulnerable in an era when Moscow, Beijing, and Pyongyang are all expanding their arsenals at breakneck speed.

China alone is building 100 new nuclear weapons a year, according to the Pentagon, and is on track to reach strategic parity with the U.S. by the mid-2030s.

‘The newest warhead that we have was built in 1989,’ Robert Peters, author of the Heritage report, told Fox News Digital.

‘The force size that we have now … That was a force design that came up when President Obama was in office in 2010, and the assumptions were in 2010 that there would be no more real competition between the United States and Russia, and China was not even a real player on the nuclear field.’

The report, authored by Robert Peters of Heritage’s Allison Center for National Security, proposes that Washington expand its force to roughly 4,625 operationally deployed nuclear weapons by 2050.

That number would include about 3,500 strategic warheads — carried by intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), ballistic missile submarines, and bombers — and about 1,125 non-strategic weapons, such as gravity bombs and theater-range missiles.

It comes amid warnings that Moscow maintains thousands of non-strategic nuclear weapons in Europe, outnumbering U.S. stocks by as much as ten to one, while China races to deploy stealth bombers, submarine-based missiles and even orbital strike systems. North Korea already possesses about 90 warheads and continues testing missiles that can reach the U.S. homeland.

‘We’ve got an arsenal today that is decades beyond its planned life cycle, and a force construct that was designed for a very benign world.’

Peters’ proposal envisions a modernized force including new Sentinel ICBMs, Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines, nuclear-capable B-21 stealth bombers, long-range cruise missiles and theater-range hypersonic weapons. The plan would still keep U.S. forces below Cold War levels but significantly above today’s posture.

It lays out a plan for regional nuclear allocations in each theater, with the largest number of assets, 3,200 warheads, being placed under Northern Command and focused on homeland defense. Some 750 warheads would be placed in Europe and 675 in the Indo-Pacific region.

It calls for Sentinel ICBMs to replace Minuteman III and B-21 and B-52 jets with new long-range standoff cruise missiles.

During the Cold War, the U.S. fielded tens of thousands of warheads, deployed in Europe, Asia and at home. The new 2050 arsenal would still be far smaller than Cold War levels.

‘A U.S. President with some regional nuclear options but only token damage-limiting capacity would quickly be confronted during a limited nuclear conflict with two unpalatable options: surrender or threaten widespread attacks on the adversary homeland, thus inviting an in-kind response, meaning suicide,’ the report warns.

Skeptics often ask why nations need thousands of nuclear weapons when a single warhead can level a city. Peters argues that this is a misconception rooted in Cold War imagery of mushroom clouds over Manhattan.

In reality, most modern nuclear warheads are not designed for ‘city busting’ but for striking enemy nuclear forces — silos, missile fields, and command-and-control centers. China, for example, is building up to 500 hardened ICBM silos in remote deserts. Military planners assume it could take at least two U.S. warheads to guarantee destruction of each site.

As Peters puts it, ‘the goal is never to get to this point. That’s why you have nuclear weapons, to make sure you never get to this point.’

It’s unclear whether the current political leadership would heed Peters’ recommendations. President Donald Trump has proposed ‘denuclearization’ talks with U.S. adversaries.

‘Trump very understandably doesn’t like nuclear weapons,’ Peters said.

But, he added, ‘we tried [denuclearizing] under President Obama in 2009 and 2012 and no one followed.’

‘Tremendous amounts of money are being spent on nuclear, and the destructive capacity is something we don’t even want to talk about today, because you don’t want to hear it,’ Trump mused in remarks to the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, in February.

‘I want to see if we can denuclearize, and I think it’s very possible,’ suggesting talks on the issue between the U.S., Russia and China.

President Vladimir Putin announced Russia would suspend its participation in the New START treaty in 2023 over U.S. support for Ukraine. Russia had frequently been caught violating the terms of the deal. But China has never engaged in negotiations with the U.S. over arms reduction.

North Korea has rejected any suggestion of denuclearizing from the U.S.

Read the report below. App users: Click here

In September, Russia proposed a one-year extension of the New START treaty, which technically expires in 2026, but the White House has yet to respond to that proposal.

Expanding the arsenal won’t be cheap. But at around $56 billion, the U.S. only spends around seven percent of the defense budget on nuclear weapons, Peters argues.

The report also calls for nuclear capabilities to be deployed forward to Finland and Poland, a proposal that is certain to rattle the Kremlin and would cut strike times down from hours to minutes.

Nuclear weapons are currently hosted in Italy, Germany and the Netherlands — bases chosen in the Cold War when they sat just 150 miles from the Soviet front line. But Russia’s front line has now moved 800 miles east.

He made a similar call for nuclear capabilities to be placed in South Korea. Washington periodically deploys U.S. nuclear-armed submarines to South Korea and involves Seoul in its nuclear planning operations in exchange for an agreement from Seoul not to develop its own nuclear weapons.

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House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., is warning that everyday Americans could be at risk in a prolonged government shutdown.

The top House Republican sat down for an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital on Wednesday, the first day of the ongoing government shutdown.

Asked how long he thought it would continue, Johnson said he was praying for a short ordeal.

‘My expectation is that I don’t know how it could go longer than a week or so, because so many people have been so adversely affected by this,’ Johnson said.

He pointed to two programs that he was concerned about in particular: The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

‘[Democrats are] talking about healthcare. Not only did their counter-proposal say they wanted to cut the rural hospital fund and do all these other things, but what’s happening right now in the shutdown is that the WIC program is now unfunded — women, infants and children nutrition. That’s not a small thing,’ Johnson said.

WIC provides free nutrition support to low-income pregnant women, new mothers, infants and children under age 5.

On a call with House Republicans held Wednesday, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russ Vought warned that WIC could run out of funding within days without a federal funding deal, Fox News Digital was previously told.

FEMA, however, is expected to continue operations through a government shutdown, as it has in the past. But its funding source, the Disaster Relief Fund, relies on a budget that’s allocated by Congress on an annual basis.

A failure to replenish the Disaster Relief Fund could make it more difficult for FEMA to respond in the event of a natural disaster.

The National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) is also in danger of lapsing, which could leave millions of Americans without financial help if a hurricane or other disaster hits, Johnson pointed out.

‘You have FEMA — I mean, I’m from a hurricane state. We’re in the middle of hurricane season. I’ve got two of them off the coast of the U.S. right now,’ Johnson, whose district is anchored in Shreveport, La., said.

‘If your flood insurance lapses right now, they’re shut down. Or if you go buy a new house, and you have to have flood insurance, none of that can be processed right now because they just shut the government down. I mean, this is real.’

He also expressed concern for the military members in his district who will have to work without getting paid until the shutdown is over.

‘The troops are working without pay … I have a big veterans community and active duty service member community because I have two major military installations in my district, Louisiana’s 4th Congressional [District],’ Johnson said. 

‘I think a lot about these young airmen and soldiers who are deployed right now for their country, and they left behind young wives who are pregnant and have small children. They’re not going to get a paycheck until [Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.] comes to his senses.’

The House passed a measure to keep the current federal spending levels roughly flat through Nov. 21 to give Congress more time to reach a longer-term deal for fiscal year (FY) 2026. That bill, called a continuing resolution (CR), advanced mostly along party lines.

But in the Senate, where at least several Democrats are needed to reach the 60-vote threshold to overcome a filibuster, progress has stalled. 

Senate Democrats are demanding concessions on healthcare, including an extension of COVID-19 pandemic-era Obamacare subsidies that are set to expire at the end of this year.

But Republicans have contended that their plan should remain free of any partisan policy riders.

The Senate is likely to hold another vote on the measure, its fourth in total, on Friday.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

The Clemson vs. North Carolina game features a rare matchup between a multi-time national champion coach and a multi-time Super Bowl champion coach.
Florida State faces a crucial rivalry game against Miami that could determine its ACC championship and playoff chances.
No. 17 Vanderbilt aims to defeat No. 11 Alabama for the second consecutive year, a feat not accomplished since the 1950s.

This wasn’t what we expected from Clemson and North Carolina.

Saturday’s game marks just the second in college football history pitting a coach with multiple national championships and a coach with multiple Super Bowl rings. The other came when Joe Paterno and Penn State met Bill Walsh and Stanford in the 1993 Blockbuster Bowl.

But the Tigers and Dabo Swinney are 1-3 with only an ugly win against Troy. The Tar Heels are 2-2 in Bill Belichick’s first year, with losses to TCU and Central Florida by a combined 59 points.

Clemson’s offense is terrible. The Tar Heels might just be terrible, period. Rather than a must-see clash between Swinney and Belichick, Saturday’s game in Chapel Hill is one of the saddest matchups of the regular season.

The drumbeat of discontent over Clemson’s slide into irrelevance would grow even louder with a loss to one of the weakest teams in the ACC. From the Tar Heels’ perspective, a loss would drop their bowl odds even lower and place Belichick on track for a miserable debut.

USA TODAY Sports looks at the team, game, coach and quarterback facing the most pressure in Week 6 of the regular season:

Team: No. 19 Florida State

Florida State opened the year with a win against No. 11 Alabama and capped the first month with a 46-38 loss at Virginia. The Seminoles are one of the biggest enigmas in the Power Four as the regular season turns to October.

The offense is obviously much improved, especially on the ground. FSU ran for 1,079 all of last season but are currently averaging a Power Four-best 336.3 yards per game. Overall, the offense ranks second nationally at 8.2 yards per play.

But the defense flopped against the Cavaliers and will be put to the test by Carson Beck and No. 3 Miami. This is a crucial rivalry matchup that promises to have a huge impact on the ACC race.

With a loss, FSU will be 0-2 in league play and down the tiebreaker to the Hurricanes. In this scenario, the Seminoles would need a perfect run through the rest of the ACC slate and some help to sneak into the conference championship game.

But a loss would be even more damaging to the Seminoles’ reputation after a dreadful 2024 season and a dramatic offseason overhaul. To be taken seriously as a playoff contender, FSU has to beat Miami at home.

Game: No. 17 Vanderbilt at No. 11 Alabama

Vanderbilt is looking to beat Alabama twice in as many years, something the program hasn’t done since 1955-56. (The 1957 game ended in a 6-6 tie, the Tide hired Bear Bryant a year later, and the rest is brutal history for the Commodores.) Led by Diego Pavia, the Commodores swamped Utah State to end September and are 5-0 for just the second time in the modern era.

The Tide salvaged the first month by beating No. 10 Georgia 24-21 behind two touchdowns from quarterback Ty Simpson, who has 11 scores without an interception in four games. While the cast has changed, Alabama ended last September with a win against the Bulldogs but cratered from there in a disappointing debut season for coach Kalen DeBoer.

Losing to Vanderbilt would erase the good vibes coming out of the win in Athens and be nearly fatal to the Tide’s playoff hopes with games still to come against No. 18 Missouri, No. 15 Tennessee, No. 13 LSU and No. 8 Oklahoma.

It’s a prove-something Saturday for Vanderbilt. The Commodores’ best win came last month against then-No. 10 South Carolina, which lost star quarterback LaNorris Sellers to injury in the second quarter. Beating the Tide would make them a legitimate playoff contender.

Coach: Steve Sarkisian, Texas

Sarkisian has dodged the spotlight given all the national focus on Arch Manning’s struggles as the new starter. While that’s been one of the biggest storylines of the first month, Manning’s issues are simply a microcosm of the Longhorns’ sloppy and often unimpressive play through four games.

The first two weeks of October will decide whether Texas makes another appearance in the SEC championship game. First comes a road trip to Florida as roughly touchdown favorites, followed by No. 8 Oklahoma at the Cotton Bowl.

The Gators are capable of pulling off the upset if they can protect the football and awaken an unproductive running game. That Florida has been pathetic on early downs has set up quarterback DJ Lagway up for failure during this three-game losing streak to South Florida, LSU and Miami.

Looking ahead one week, Oklahoma will be without quarterback John Mateer and will use backup Michael Hawkins Jr., who started last year’s 34-3 loss to the Longhorns. Hawkins and the Sooners will have a tune-up game this Saturday against Kent State.

This crucial two-game stretch that will decide the Longhorns’ season. After a rocky month, Sarkisian has to get Texas back on track to avoid a loss that could cripple its postseason résumé.

Quarterback: CJ Carr, Notre Dame

Carr and the No. 21 Fighting Irish rebounded from losses to No. 3 Miami and No. 6 Texas A&M by routing Purdue and Arkansas. The redshirt freshman has thrown six touchdowns and averaged a whopping 13.8 yards per attempt in these two Power Four wins.

A productive passing game has helped open things up on the ground. After going for 229 yards on 3.4 yards per carry against the Hurricanes and Aggies, the Irish have 464 yards and nine touchdowns on the ground against the Boilermakers and Razorbacks.

Things should be a little more difficult against Boise State, which gave up just 65 yards on 28 attempts in last week’s 47-14 win against Appalachian State. Overall, the Broncos are allowing opponents to complete 55.5% of attempts with four touchdowns and five interceptions.

The Broncos’ national credibility makes this one of the most important games on Notre Dame’s remaining schedule, perhaps exceeded only by the matchup with Southern California later this month.

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The San Francisco 49ers receiver has stepped up in a big way to start the 2025 NFL season, becoming the team’s de facto WR1 as injuries mount. Despite that reality, the second-year pro has thrived – regardless of the quarterback or supporting cast.

Already without Jauan Jennings and Brock Purdy on Thursday night against the Los Angeles Rams, the Niners are running out of weapons for battle.

Injuries are testing the depth of Kyle Shanahan’s team and a short week is only going to present a bigger challenge. Here’s the latest on Pearsall and his availability for Week 5.

Is Ricky Pearsall playing tonight?

Pearsall has been ruled out for Thursday night’s game against the Rams with a knee injury.

The receiver appeared to aggravate an already existing knee injury during the team’s Week 4 loss to the Jaguars. Pearsall said after the game that he felt some instability in the knee after a hard fall, according to ESPN’s Nick Wagoner.

He didn’t participate in practice ahead of Thursday night’s game, listed as a DNP on the 49ers injury report and ruled out.

San Francisco is no stranger to being shorthanded this season, but Week 5 might be their toughest test yet. Purdy and Jennings join a group that already includes Brandon Aiyuk and George Kittle, leaving the 49ers with little depth on their roster for a key division clash.

49ers WR depth chart

Pearsall isn’t the only 49ers player that will miss Thursday’s game. Here’s what San Francisco has to work with in the receiver room:

Brandon Aiyuk (injured)
Jauan Jennings (injured)
Ricky Pearsall (injured)
Demarcus Robinson
Skyy Moore
Kendrick Bourne
Marquez Valdes-Scantling

Robinson figures to be the WR1 for Mac Jones on Thursday in an offense that will also feature plenty of Jake Tonges at tight end. While all the healthy receivers on the roster have starting experience, it’ll be a challenge to overcome losing all that star power on offense.

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