Senate GOP pushes ahead with budget bill that funds Trump’s mass deportations and border wall

U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune (R-SD) speaks to members of the press as he walks through a hallway prior to a vote at the U.S. Capitol on February 18, 2025 in Washington, DC.  (AFP)
U.S. Senate Majority Leader Sen. John Thune (R-SD) speaks to members of the press as he walks through a hallway prior to a vote at the U.S. Capitol on February 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. (AFP)
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Updated 19 February 2025

Senate GOP pushes ahead with budget bill that funds Trump’s mass deportations and border wall

Senate GOP pushes ahead with budget bill that funds Trump’s mass deportations and border wall
  • This is the first step in unlocking Trump’s campaign promises — tax cuts, energy production and border controls — and dominating the agenda in Congress

WASHINGTON: Senate Republicans pushed ahead late Tuesday on a scaled-back budget bill, a $340 billion package to give the Trump administration money for mass deportations and other priorities, as Democrats prepare a counter-campaign against the onslaught of actions coming from the White House.
On a party-line vote, 50-47, Republicans launched the process, skipping ahead of the House Republicans who prefer President Donald Trump’s approach for a “big, beautiful bill” that includes $4.5 trillion in tax cuts that are tops on the party agenda. Senate Republicans plan to deal with tax cuts later, in a second package.
“It’s time to act,” said Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., on social media, announcing the plan ahead as the House is on recess week. “Let’s get it done.”
This is the first step in unlocking Trump’s campaign promises — tax cuts, energy production and border controls — and dominating the agenda in Congress. While Republicans have majority control of both the House and Senate, giving a rare sweep of Washington power, they face big hurdles trying to put the president’s agenda into law over steep Democratic objections.
It’s coming as the administration’s Department of Government Efficiency effort is slashing costs across government departments, leaving a trail of fired federal workers and dismantling programs on which many Americans depend. Democrats, having floundered amid the initial chaos coming from the White House, emerged galvanized as they try to warn Americans what’s at stake.
“These bills that they have have one purpose — and that is they’re trying to give a tax break to their billionaire buddies and have you, the average American person, pay for it,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer told AP. “It is outrageous.”
Schumer convened a private weekend call with Democratic senators and emerged with a strategy to challenge Republicans for prioritizing tax cuts that primarily flow to the wealthy at the expense of program and service cuts to US health care, scientific research, veterans services and other programs.
As the Senate begins the cumbersome budget process this week — which entails an initial 50 hours of debate followed by an expected all-night session with dozens if not 100 or more efforts to amend the package in what’s called a vote-a-rama — Democrats are preparing to drill down on those issues.
The Senate GOP package would allow $175 billion to be spent on border security, including funding for mass deportation operations and to build the wall along the US-Mexico border; a $150 billion boost to the Pentagon for defense spending; and $20 billion for the Coast Guard.
Republicans are determined to push ahead after Trump’s border czar Tom Homan and top aide Stephen Miller told senators privately last week they are running short of cash to accomplish the president’s mass deportations and other border priorities.
The Senate Budget Committee said the package would cost about $85.5 billion a year, for four years of Trump’s presidency, paid for with new reductions and revenues elsewhere that other committees will draw up.
Eyeing ways to pay for the package, Senate Republicans are considering a rollback of the Biden administration’s methane emissions fee, which was approved by Democrats as part of climate change strategies in the Inflation Reduction Act, and hoping to draw new revenue from energy leases as they aim to spur domestic energy production.
While the House and Senate budget resolutions are often considered simply statements of policy priorities, these could actually become law.
The budget resolutions are being considered under what’s called the reconciliation process, which allows passage on a simple majority vote without many of the procedural hurdles that stall bills. Once rare, reconciliation is increasingly being used in the House and Senate to pass big packages on party-line votes when one party controls the White House and Congress.
During Trump’s first term, Republicans used the reconciliation process to pass the GOP tax cuts in 2017. Democrats used reconciliation during the Biden presidency era to approve COVID relief and also the Inflation Reduction Act.


Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets
Updated 5 sec ago

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets

Zelensky hopes for ‘positive decision’ on EU use of Russian assets
“I hope that they will make a political decision, positive decision in one or another way to help Ukraine with funds,” Zelensky said
The move is fraught with legal and political perils

BRUSSELS: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky expressed hope Thursday that the European Union would move forward with plans to help Ukraine with a mammoth new “reparations loan” funded by frozen Russian assets.
Zelensky was in Brussels for talks with EU leaders, who discussed plans to hand 140 billion euros ($162 billion) to Kyiv over the next few years, to keep it afloat as the war with Russia drags on.
“I hope that they will make a political decision, positive decision in one or another way to help Ukraine with funds,” Zelensky told a press conference after the meeting.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive, has floated a complex scheme that would see Ukraine pay back the money only once Russia coughs up for the damages it has caused.
The move is fraught with legal and political perils. Belgium, where the bulk of the money is held, has demanded guarantees that the rest of the bloc will share any liabilities if Russia takes the matter to court.
EU officials are hoping that the EU’s 27 leaders will give a preliminary go-ahead on Thursday for the commission to draw up a formal legal proposal for the loan.
“I think that the dialogue was really, maybe not simple, but it was very good,” Zelensky said of the talks. “Really we count on decisions on this topic.”
“Russia brought war to our land, and they have to pay for this war,” he said.
Asked to sum up his meeting with US President Donald Trump last week, which Ukrainian officials described as “tense,” Zelensky suggested the outcome was better than it perhaps initially seemed.
Zelensky came back empty handed after traveling to Washington in the hope of securing US long-range Tomahawk missiles to hit back at Russia — but the meeting was ultimately followed by US sanctions on Russia’s energy sector.
“The result of this meeting — we have sanctions on Russian energy. We don’t have a meeting in Hungary without Ukraine, and we have not yet Tomahawks. That’s it. This is the result. I think, not bad,” Zelensky said.
“Each day brings something,” he added. “Maybe tomorrow we will have Tomahawks.”
The idea of a summit in Budapest between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin was floated after a call between the two leaders.
But the plan was shelved this week, with Washington expressing its disappointment at the lack of progress in ceasefire negotiations with Moscow and later slapping sanctions on Russia’s two largest oil companies.

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate
Updated 58 min 17 sec ago

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate

F-35s, fires and fixing: Ukraine, Gaza wars threaten climate
  • The cost of the climate damage attributable to the war already exceeds $43 billion, de Klerk said
  • A separate study looking at the Israeli-Hamas war in Gaza estimates the carbon footprint for the first 15 months topped 32 million tons of emissions

LONDON: From fuel guzzled by fighter jets to wildfires sparked by shelling, the war in Ukraine has created vast amounts of planet-warming emissions, according to a new study that says Russia should pay for the damage to the global climate.
The first three years of conflict have generated almost 237 million metric tons of greenhouse gases (GHG), equivalent to putting 120 million fossil-fuel cars on the road, or the combined annual emissions of Belgium, Austria and Ireland, according to researchers.
“This is pushing us in the wrong direction at a time when we drastically have to cut emissions,” said climate researcher Lennard de Klerk, lead author of the report tallying the war’s emissions, which was published this month.
The cost of the climate damage attributable to the war — in which hundreds of thousands have been killed on both sides — already exceeds $43 billion, de Klerk said.
“Russia should pay compensation for this damage as part of wider war reparations,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
A separate study looking at the Israeli-Hamas war in Gaza estimates the carbon footprint for the first 15 months topped 32 million tons of emissions, when post-conflict reconstruction is factored in.
That is comparable to the annual emissions of Ivory Coast.
“The numbers are staggering for such an intense period,” said Benjamin Neimark, who led the research by UK and US-based experts.
“Most direct conflict emissions come from jet fuel, but what really surprised us were the projected emissions for reconstruction. That was a shock and made us sit up.”
The pioneering studies will be presented on the sidelines of next month’s COP30 climate summit in Brazil.
Climate researchers say conflicts and climate change create a cycle of destruction — not only does war drive climate change, but climate change can fuel conflict in fragile regions as competition intensifies over water and other resources.

WILDFIRES
While military activity is the biggest source of conflict-related emissions in Ukraine, de Klerk said he was surprised to find wildfires account for a fifth of the war’s carbon footprint since Russia’s 2022 invasion.
Relentless shelling has sparked thousands of blazes which have ravaged forests and farmland, with some likely exacerbated by the detonation of land mines and unexploded ordnance strewn across the landscape.
Nearly 850,000 hectares were torched last year, according to the report by the Initiative on GHG Accounting of War, an international research team led by de Klerk.
“This is more than 20 times the annual average,” he said. “The summer of 2024 was extremely dry, most likely due to climate change, which enabled fires to spread.”
With the expansion of the war in Gaza, missile strikes across the Lebanon-Israel border also ignited fires, destroying forests and farmland.
As in Ukraine, blazes quickly raged out of control due to the dangers firefighters face operating in these war zones.

RECONSTRUCTION
The destruction of energy infrastructure in both Ukraine and Gaza has also increased emissions.
Russia’s targeting of oil depots has sent tons of fuel up in flames, while attacks on gas and electricity infrastructure have released potent GHGs like methane and sulfur hexafluoride or SF6, which has a global warming potential 24,000 times greater than CO2.
Before Israel launched its assault on Gaza in October 2023, about a quarter of the enclave’s electricity came from solar panels – one of the highest shares in the world.
But the destruction of most solar infrastructure has increased reliance on polluting diesel-powered generators.
Neimark said the carbon footprint of post-war reconstruction in Gaza, where about 68,000 people have been killed, would dwarf emissions from the conflict itself.
Israel’s intense bombardment has destroyed more than 90 percent of housing and turned Gaza into a wasteland, creating 60 million tons of debris, according to UN estimates.
Rebuilding homes and infrastructure will require enormous quantities of concrete and steel, whose production are highly carbon-intensive.
The decimation of farmland, orchards and shrub land has also raised the risk of desertification in a region that is already vulnerable to the effects of climate change, said Neimark, a senior lecturer at Queen Mary University of London.
Both wars have additionally increased global emissions away from the frontlines.
Airspace closures have forced commercial flights to reroute, pushing up fuel consumption. Flights from London to Tokyo now take almost three hours longer, de Klerk said.
Unrest in the Middle East has similarly disrupted international shipping through the Red Sea, boosting emissions due to longer routes and the need for faster sailing speeds.

MILITARY DATA HOLE
This new research on Gaza and Ukraine is part of a wider push to increase transparency around global military emissions.
Even in peacetime, armies have large carbon footprints — maintenance of bases, transport of troops and equipment, military exercises and weapons production all add up.
The Conflict and Environment Observatory, a UK-based non-profit, estimates the world’s militaries are responsible for about 5.5 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions.
But countries are not required to report their military emissions to international climate bodies.
Experts say the data gap means we risk underestimating the size of emission cuts required to limit the global temperature increase to below 1.5 Celsius.
With many countries now ramping up defense spending in response to multiple crises, there are fears this will both increase military emissions and divert funding from efforts to tackle climate change.
Climate researchers say militaries must be forced to report their emissions.
“We can’t start making meaningful cuts without adequate baselines,” Neimark said.
“The military has long operated as if the emissions coming out of an F-35 don’t stink, and that has to stop.”


Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say

Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say
Updated 23 October 2025

Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say

Sellers cancel deals with Chinese oil refiner Yulong after UK sanctions, sources say
  • Most of the cancelations apply to spot cargoes that were due to load after November 13, when the sanctions take effect
  • The decision to cancel the contracts partly stems from concerns about the ability to make payments

SINGAPORE: Several suppliers have canceled sales of Middle Eastern and Canadian oil to China’s Yulong Petrochemical after the UK imposed sanctions on the refiner, which is likely to push it to buy more Russian crude, multiple sources familiar with the deals said.
The refiner, China’s newest with a capacity of 400,000 barrels per day and one of the country’s largest single Russian oil customers, is among the entities Britain designated last week to curb Moscow’s oil revenues used to fund the Ukraine war.
Suppliers that are unwinding supply deals include European majors TotalEnergies, BP, trading house Trafigura, Chinese state trader PetroChina International and others, the sources said.
Most of the cancelations apply to spot cargoes that were due to load after November 13, when the sanctions take effect.
PetroChina International and TotalEnergies each exited transactions supplying Access Western Blend, a heavy crude exported from Canada, said two other sources, who have knowledge of those transactions.
BP declined to comment. Total, PetroChina and Yulong did not respond to requests for comment.
Trafigura had been supplying Yulong with 2 million barrels a month of Omani and Abu Dhabi Upper Zakum crude under an annual contract, said sources with knowledge of the company’s transactions with Yulong.

PIVOT TO RUSSIAN OIL
The decision to cancel the contracts partly stems from concerns about the ability to make payments as large western banks will avoid working with sanctioned entities, the sources said.
With dwindling access to non-sanctioned crude supplies, Yulong will most likely buy more Russian oil, which already accounts for about half of its intake.
“We are already hearing Yulong is moving toward running predominantly sanctioned barrels, which, similar to the sanctions impact on Nayara, may necessitate run cuts,” said Sun Jianan, an analyst with consultancy Energy Aspects.
India’s Nayara Energy, partially owned by Russian major Rosneft, has reduced its refinery runs after European Union sanctions were imposed in July.
While larger companies step away from Yulong, smaller companies without UK connections could continue dealings, said an executive whose company continues supplying Yulong and declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the matter.
Yulong buys 150,000 to 250,000 barrels per day of Russian crude, according to estimates by traders and tanker tracker Vortexa.
Most of Yulong’s Russian imports are ESPO Blend from the country’s Pacific coast that Chinese refineries favor because of the short transit period for the shipments. Recently, Yulong has also imported Urals crude from Russia’s European ports, said three traders familiar with Yulong’s procurement patterns.
It secures most of its Russian supply from dealers linked to major Russian producers, said two of those sources.
Built on a man-made island near the port of Yantai in the northeastern province of Shandong, Yulong Petrochemical is a joint venture between private aluminum firm Nanshan Group and government-backed Shandong Energy Group.


Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says
Updated 23 October 2025

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says

Japan nuclear sector seeks greater support in new reactor builds, lobby head says
  • Just 14 of the 54 nuclear plants operating in Japan before the 2011 Fukushima disaster have been brought back online
  • Takaichi has said reviving nuclear power is key to Japan’s energy security

TOKYO: Japan’s nuclear power industry wants greater support for new reactor building, including via state-run capacity auctions, under the government of newly elected pro-nuclear Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, a lobby head said on Thursday.
Just 14 of the 54 nuclear plants operating in Japan before the 2011 Fukushima disaster have been brought back online, and Takaichi has said reviving nuclear power is key to Japan’s energy security.
However, much of Japan’s nuclear focus has been on restarting shuttered reactors — the government recently extended operating lifetimes from 40 to 60 years — with just one new plant currently on the drawing board.
Hideki Masui, president of the Japan Atomic Industrial Forum (JAIF), said more support for building new reactors, a process that takes two decades in Japan, should be made available through the long-term decarbonized capacity auction (LTDA) scheme to develop new power generation.
“We should include a scheme into the LTDA which allows some kind of a fund recovery even during construction from an early stage,” Masui told Reuters.
There are no safety regulations for next-generation reactors, and operators are asking for regulatory predictability while they also seek “support for financing,” Masui said.
In July, Kansai Electric Power, Japan’s top nuclear power operator, announced surveys to build a new reactor in western Japan, the first concrete step toward building a reactor since Fukushima.
Japan aims to have nuclear power accounting for 20 percent of its electricity mix in 2040, from less than 10 percent now, with power demand from data centers reversing years of decline.
Another four idled reactors have been given initial restart permits by authorities, while eight more are undergoing safety checks and a further 10 could apply for restarts, Masui said.
“Theoretically, I think Japan can achieve its nuclear goal of 20 percent in 2040 with more than 30 reactors operating,” Masui said.


Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids
Updated 23 October 2025

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids

Nigerian military says kills 50 jihadists in army base raids
  • The groups are seeking to establish a caliphate in the northeast
  • “The combined ground and air efforts resulted in the neutralization of over 50 terrorists across all the locations,” Lt. Col. Uban said

KANO, Nigeria: Nigeria’s military said on Thursday it had killed 50 militants using drones to carry out multiple attacks on army bases in the volatile northeast.
The authorities in Africa’s most populous country and one of its powerhouses, have been fighting the Boko Haram militant group and its Daesh West Africa Province (Daesh-WAP) splinter for 16 years.
The groups are seeking to establish a caliphate in the northeast.
In the early hours of Thursday, troops aided by fighter jets engaged insurgents who had launched coordinated attacks on bases in the towns of Dikwa, Mafa and Gajibo in Borno state as well as in Katarko in neighboring Yobe state, a military spokesman said in a statement.
The military did not say which faction was behind the attacks, but intelligence sources told AFP that Daesh-WAP militants were responsible.
“The combined ground and air efforts resulted in the neutralization of over 50 terrorists across all the locations,” Lt. Col. Sani Uba, a military spokesman in the northwest said in the statement.
He said several soldiers were wounded in the fighting, without giving numbers.
“Some vehicles and buildings were also gutted by fire from the terrorists’ armed drones and RPG (rocket-propelled grenade) fire during the battle, especially in Mafa and Dikwa, where a part of the defenses were momentarily breached,” he said.
Armed insurgents are increasingly using drones, often commercial models modified to drop bombs or grenades.
A resident in Mafa showed AFP videos and pictures from the area showing the charred carcasses of several trucks and said the militants had set them ablaze during the attack.
Mafa locals said the trucks were mostly laden with cement heading to Chad whose drivers had parked for the night for fear of militant attacks on the highway.
The conflict has killed more than 40,000 and displaced around two million in northeastern Nigeria.
It has spilt over into neighboring countries, prompting the creation of a regional military coalition to combat the Islamist groups.