Saturday, September 13, 2025

First Details of President Trump’s New Tax Cut Plan Revealed.

The White House is rolling out an overview of President Donald J. Trump’s new tax cut proposal, which is expected to be soon introduced as legislation in Congress. On Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt outlined the plan shortly after Trump met privately with Republican lawmakers who have been at an impasse over how to proceed with the legislation.

“So these are the tax priorities of the Trump administration that the President has laid out for Members in that meeting today,” Leavitt announced before listing off a series of overhauls to the tax code. According to Leavitt, President Trump expects the plan to include no tax on tips—noting that this was “a very public campaign promise the President made”—no tax on senior citizens’ social security, no tax on overtime pay, a renewal of the tax cuts enacted by Trump during his first term, an adjustment to the SALT cap, the elimination of special tax breaks for billionaire sports team owners, closing the carried interest loophole, and new tax reductions for companies that locate their production in the United States.

CONGRESS DIVIDED? 

Two of the plan’s most contentious provisions will likely be the proposals to close the carried interest loophole and adjust the tax code’s SALT cap. The carried interest loophole results from the different tax treatment of interest on assets held over a certain period of time. If that interest is held for three years, it is treated as a long-term capital gain and taxed at a much lower rate than if it had been realized essentially as annual income. Changes to the loophole are fervently opposed by private equity, real estate, and hedge fund managers who use it to reduce their tax burdens.

Additionally, Congress appears divided on what changes should be made to the SALT cap, a provision allowing taxpayers to itemize as a deduction their state and local taxes on their federal income tax return. This provision is popular in high-tax states as it allows residents to offset that burden by reducing what they owe on the federal income tax. In 2017, President Trump capped the SALT deduction at just $10,000—significantly limiting the deduction individuals living in high-tax states can claim. However, the President has signaled he is open to lifting the cap, though some lawmakers want it abolished entirely.

Meanwhile, Republican lawmakers on Capitol Hill are also divided on how to amend the tax code to implement Trump’s proposed cuts. House and Senate Republican leaders are at odds on whether to tackle the tax cuts with border security funding and other priorities in one budget reconciliation bill or separate the cuts into their own budget measure, resulting in two bills.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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The White House is rolling out an overview of President Donald J. Trump's new tax cut proposal, which is expected to be soon introduced as legislation in Congress. On Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt outlined the plan shortly after Trump met privately with Republican lawmakers who have been at an impasse over how to proceed with the legislation. show more

Judge Delays Deadline for President Trump’s Buyout Offer for Federal Employees.

U.S. District Court Judge George O’Toole Jr. issued an order Thursday afternoon pausing the deadline for federal employees to accept a buyout authorized by President Donald Trump that would see them voluntarily resign in exchange for eight months of pay and benefits. The order comes just hours before the offer expires at midnight.

The deadline pause will last until at least Monday when Judge O’Toole Jr. is set to hear arguments in a lawsuit brought by federal worker unions challenging the legality of the buyout. Should the Trump White House successfully defend the policy in court, the delay may prove beneficial. The National Pulse reported Thursday morning that approximately 40,000 federal employees had decided to take the buyout. However, by Thursday afternoon, that number had risen to 60,000.

In their court filing, the federal worker unions contend that the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) has not been clear as to whether they “can (or will) honor the financial commitment for agencies across government when Congress has appropriated no funds for this purpose, and the statutory basis and appropriation for this promise remain unclear.” In addition, the lawsuit alleges the measure “is also contrary to the law.”

Image by GPA Photo Archive.

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U.S. District Court Judge George O'Toole Jr. issued an order Thursday afternoon pausing the deadline for federal employees to accept a buyout authorized by President Donald Trump that would see them voluntarily resign in exchange for eight months of pay and benefits. The order comes just hours before the offer expires at midnight. show more

Bannon Reveals Jack Smith’s Lawfare Team ‘Quite Upset’ Biden Didn’t Grant Them Pardons.

Former White House chief strategist and War Room host Stephen K. Bannon revealed former Department of Justice (DOJ) special counsel Jack Smith and his team of federal attorneys, who waged a partisan lawfare campaign against President Donald J. Trump, are “quite upset that they didn’t get pardons” before former President Joe Biden left office last month. According to Bannon, the Biden DOJ lawfare specialists fear they will be the target of investigations by the department’s new leadership appointed by President Trump. Bannon believes this fear is justified.

“I think there’s going to be a lot of people that go to prison. I mean, I think a lot of people are going to go to prison for many, many years,” Bannon said in a recent interview with GBN America. He argued a sense of “arrogance” blinded Jack Smith and his team to the likelihood that Trump would win the 2024 presidential election.

“And I hear that Jack Smith’s team is quite upset that they didn’t get pardons,” Bannon revealed while offering Smith some advice: “I will just tell them, lawyer up. You know, you might want to check countries that don’t have [extradition] treaties with the United States, right? You might want to look at living the rest of your life there because investigations are going to happen.”

Bannon, himself a target of the Biden DOJ’s lawfare campaign against Trump and his allies, indicated that the beginnings of these investigations could already be underway, given who Trump appointed to the DOJ.

However, the former White House chief strategist cautioned that reviewing the Biden government’s lawfare efforts is a monumental task, and that President Trump and his DOJ may be better served appointing a special prosecutor to oversee the investigations and impanel a grand jury.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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Former White House chief strategist and War Room host Stephen K. Bannon revealed former Department of Justice (DOJ) special counsel Jack Smith and his team of federal attorneys, who waged a partisan lawfare campaign against President Donald J. Trump, are "quite upset that they didn't get pardons" before former President Joe Biden left office last month. According to Bannon, the Biden DOJ lawfare specialists fear they will be the target of investigations by the department's new leadership appointed by President Trump. Bannon believes this fear is justified. show more

Democrats Delay Vote on Kash Patel’s FBI Director Nomination for ANOTHER Week.

Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee are delaying the vote to advance President Donald J. Trump’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director nominee, Kash Patel, for one more week. Under committee rules, the minority party can hold over a nomination vote for one additional week until its next meeting. The Judiciary Committee’s minority ranking member, Senator Dick Durbin (I-IL), was the lawmaker who made the “hold over” request.

The committee’s chairman, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), blasted Democrat members for the delaying tactic: “Democrats are establishing a double standard by forcing us to meet this morning,” the Judiciary Committee chairman said, noting in the last Congress, Republicans did not force the committee to meet in person just to hold over nominations. However, Grassley relented, acknowledging: “The minority as well as myself has exercised their right and my right under the committee rules to hold over the nomination of Kash Patel to be Director of the FBI. So that nomination is held over.”

Sen. Durbin contends the delay is justified, claiming Patel made a “direct contradiction under oath” regarding his involvement with a choir comprised of individuals prosecuted and imprisoned by the Biden Department of Justice (DOJ) for their actions during the January 6 Capitol riots. Additionally, the Illinois Democrat contends the week delay will give lawmakers more time to review a book Patel wrote.

“It’s filled with grievances, filled with conspiracy theories, and filled with information about how he sided with the January 6th rioters against the police,” Durbin insisted after leaving the Judiciary Committee meeting on Thursday.

Despite the Democrat “hold over” on his nomination, Patel appears to already have enough votes to be approved by the full Senate. A final confirmation vote could come as soon as next weekend.

Image by Gage Skidmore.

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Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee are delaying the vote to advance President Donald J. Trump's Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director nominee, Kash Patel, for one more week. Under committee rules, the minority party can hold over a nomination vote for one additional week until its next meeting. The Judiciary Committee's minority ranking member, Senator Dick Durbin (I-IL), was the lawmaker who made the "hold over" request. show more

40,000 Federal Bureaucrats Take Trump’s Buyout Offer Ahead of Midnight Deadline.

Federal government employees have until midnight to decide whether to accept President Donald J. Trump’s offer of a buyout to voluntarily resign in exchange for eight months of pay and benefits. As of Thursday morning, approximately 40,000 government workers, amounting to roughly two percent of the federal civilian workforce, have accepted the buyout offer. Additionally, Office of Personnel Management (OPM) officials say deferred retirement applications have increased and may rise further by the day’s end as employees finalize decisions.

Federal personnel were advised to submit resignations by emailing the word “resign” to their government accounts. OPM communicated to employees that while some agencies and military branches might experience workforce increases, most federal bodies are likely to downsize. This includes plans for restructuring, realignment, and potential reductions in force.

OPM is also suggesting it may initiate furloughs and a shift to at-will employment status for many workers. In addition, the federal government’s personnel office is also warning federal employees of possible changes in office locations due to consolidation and divestitures.

Despite these incentives, federal worker unions continue to advise members against accepting the offer. The unions have initiated a legal challenge to block the program, with a court hearing set for Thursday afternoon.

The Trump White House has projected that five to ten percent of the federal workforce might resign, potentially saving taxpayers nearly $100 billion.

Image by Ted Eytan.

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Federal government employees have until midnight to decide whether to accept President Donald J. Trump's offer of a buyout to voluntarily resign in exchange for eight months of pay and benefits. As of Thursday morning, approximately 40,000 government workers, amounting to roughly two percent of the federal civilian workforce, have accepted the buyout offer. Additionally, Office of Personnel Management (OPM) officials say deferred retirement applications have increased and may rise further by the day’s end as employees finalize decisions. show more

Rubio Skipping G20 in Johannesburg: ‘South Africa Is Doing Very Bad Things.’

President Donald J. Trump’s Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says he will not attend the globalist G20 summit in November this year, which is set to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa. Rubio announced the decision late Wednesday, citing the South African government’s adoption of a bill authorizing the state to seize land belonging to white farmers without compensation.

“I will NOT attend the G20 summit in Johannesburg. South Africa is doing very bad things. Expropriating private property. Using G20 to promote ‘solidarity, equality, & sustainability.’ In other words: DEI and climate change,” Sec. Rubio wrote in a post on X (formerly Twitter). The Trump administration’s chief diplomat continued: “My job is to advance America’s national interests, not waste taxpayer money or coddle anti-Americanism.”

In late January, South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa—of the African National Congress (ANC) party once led by Nelson Mandela—signed the land expropriation bill into law. In a statement, the South African leader defended the move, claiming the measure will be used to “expropriate land in the public interest for varied reasons,” including to “promote inclusivity and access to natural resources.”

Notably, most of South Africa’s farmers hail from the country’s white minority, with most being Dutch-descended Afrikaners. Similar expropriation measures enacted in neighboring Zimbabwe under its late dictator, Robert Mugabe, in the 2000s resulted in the murder of several of the country’s white farmers and a collapse in the country’s food production.

The National Pulse previously reported on President Donald J. Trump vowing to act if the South African government uses the law, stating he intends to cut off American aid until an investigation into the matter is completed. During his first term in office, Trump successfully intervened against an earlier attempt by South Africa to adopt a similar law.

Official State Department photo by Freddie Everett.

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President Donald J. Trump's Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, says he will not attend the globalist G20 summit in November this year, which is set to be held in Johannesburg, South Africa. Rubio announced the decision late Wednesday, citing the South African government's adoption of a bill authorizing the state to seize land belonging to white farmers without compensation. show more

President Trump Announces Executive Order to Eradicate ‘Anti-Christian Bias.’

President Donald J. Trump has announced he will be signing an executive order targeting anti-Christian bias in the federal government and tasking Attorney General Pam Bondi to “eradicate” it. The America First leader announced the action at the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C.

Under Joe Biden, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) infamously targeted traditional Catholics, who attend the Tridentine or Traditional Latin Mass, as potential extremists, branding them “radical-traditionalist” and connecting them to “racially or ethnically motivated” violence.

Trump also criticized the former regime for imprisoning Paulette Harlow, a pro-life activist in her seventies, for protesting at an abortion clinic.

In addition to the executive order on anti-Christian bias, President Trump announced he will create a “brand-new presidential commission on religious liberty,” saying it will be “a very big deal.” He further announced the creation of a new faith office in the White House led by pastor Paula White, who introduced him at the prayer breakfast.

He reflected on the assassination attempt against him in Butler, Pennsylvania, last year at length, crediting God for saving him.

WATCH: 

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President Donald J. Trump has announced he will be signing an executive order targeting anti-Christian bias in the federal government and tasking Attorney General Pam Bondi to "eradicate" it. The America First leader announced the action at the National Prayer Breakfast at the Washington Hilton in Washington, D.C. show more

President Trump Orders Nearly All USAID Staff on Leave.

President Donald J. Trump will order nearly all federal employees with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) on administrative leave this Friday. The move comes as the international aid agency faces increasing scrutiny over its disbursement of taxpayer dollars and allegations it funds nongovernmental organizations and other groups actively undermining American interests abroad.

According to a notice on the USAID website, the measure will affect all “direct hire personnel” from February 7 at 11:59 PM. However, those responsible for essential operations, leadership roles, and select programs will continue their duties. Employees not on leave will be informed by Thursday at 3:00 PM.

Last week, the Trump White House announced a freeze on all USAID disbursements after Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) found concerning irregularities, including U.S. taxpayer dollars being given to organizations associated with foreign terrorist groups. Subsequently, President Trump named Secretary of State Marco Rubio as acting director of the agency—a move believed to be a precursor to the USAID shutdown, with any critical programs being subsumed into the State Department instead.

“They have basically evolved into an agency that believes that they’re not even a U.S. government agency, that… they’re a global charity, that they take the taxpayer money, and they spend it as a global charity irrespective of whether it is in the national interest or not in the national interest,” Sec. Rubio said in an interview earlier this week. He continued, stating while initially it was hoped USAID could be reformed, it appears that is no longer possible: “Now we have basically an active effort—their basic attitude is, ‘We don’t work for anyone, we work for ourselves, no agency of government can tell us what to do.'”

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President Donald J. Trump will order nearly all federal employees with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) on administrative leave this Friday. The move comes as the international aid agency faces increasing scrutiny over its disbursement of taxpayer dollars and allegations it funds nongovernmental organizations and other groups actively undermining American interests abroad. show more

Trump’s Tariffs Aren’t Just About Leverage on Fentanyl and Immigration.

The federal government’s budget deficit isn’t the only fiscal crisis President Donald J. Trump has begun to aggressively tackle in his first few weeks in the White House. Trump is also taking initial steps to end the United States’s long-standing international trade imbalance—an economic problem at the very core of the America First agenda. The recent moves to impose tariffs on China—and potentially Canada and Mexico—are giving some insight into how Trump intends to solve the trade dilemma.

In 2024, under former President Joe Biden’s Democrat-controlled White House, the United States trade deficit surged to almost $1.2 trillion—the highest on record. The trade deficit is the gap between what the United States sells in the form of exports and buys in the form of imports. While global consumerism is a powerful tool for the U.S. federal government to wield, the continued widening gap between American exports and imports suggests significant economic vulnerabilities.

Throughout the 2024 campaign and in the initial days in power, Trump has begun to roll out an aggressive plan to end the trade deficit and imbalances through tariffs, tax incentives, and slashing regulation to drive the restoration of jobs—especially in the manufacturing sector. Trump correctly points to the trade deficit as being indicative of greater problems in the American economy, stemming from a lack of action against currency manipulators, the overregulation of American businesses, and outdated trade agreements.

China—along with several other Asian nations—and the European Union (EU) are some of the primary drivers of the American trade deficit. In the case of China, the country’s communist regime uses a variety of tools, including currency manipulation, wage suppression, and heavy state subsidies, to attract foreign manufacturing and other production. This strategy has catapulted China to the top of the world’s exporter list. Meanwhile, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been careful to keep foreign imports low, tilting global trade markets heavily in their favor.

Meanwhile, the EU—which also holds the advantage in a trade imbalance with the United States—maintains its advantage through high tariffs on American goods like steel and automobiles. Within the EU, Germany is one of the biggest drivers of the trade imbalance and a beneficiary of an outdated agreement with the United States, made in the aftermath of World War II, which allows them to tariff our steel and auto exports.

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The federal government's budget deficit isn't the only fiscal crisis President Donald J. Trump has begun to aggressively tackle in his first few weeks in the White House. Trump is also taking initial steps to end the United States's long-standing international trade imbalance—an economic problem at the very core of the America First agenda. The recent moves to impose tariffs on China—and potentially Canada and Mexico—are giving some insight into how Trump intends to solve the trade dilemma. show more
Migrant Crime

ICE Has Already Rounded Up Almost 200 Venezuelan Gang Members.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials have already apprehended nearly 200 members of the notorious Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, the White House announced on Wednesday. From January 21 to February 3, ICE agents arrested 194 gang members who were illegally residing in the United States. President Donald J. Trump has promised to root out dangerous illegal aliens.

“President Donald Trump told the American people he’d arrest and deport members of the brutal Tren de Aragua gang, and he’s doing just that,” stated White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt. “Illegal immigrant criminal gangs like Tren de Aragua will no longer be able to terrorize American communities under President Trump’s leadership.”

Leavitt further confirmed that each of the apprehended gang members will be deported back to Venezuela, which has agreed to accept repatriation flights from the U.S.

These arrests contribute to the over 7,000 criminal aliens ICE has apprehended since President Trump took office, with raids conducted in several major sanctuary cities across the nation.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced last week that the U.S. will use the military prison at Guantanamo Bay to house deported migrants. President Trump elaborated on this strategy, stating, “Some of them are so bad we don’t even trust the countries to hold them, because we don’t want them coming back, so we’re gonna send them out to Guantanamo. This will double our capacity immediately, right? And tough. That’s a tough, that’s a tough place to get out of.”

El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele has also agreed to host criminal aliens—and even U.S. criminals—at his CECOT mega-prison.

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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials have already apprehended nearly 200 members of the notorious Venezuelan gang, Tren de Aragua, the White House announced on Wednesday. From January 21 to February 3, ICE agents arrested 194 gang members who were illegally residing in the United States. President Donald J. Trump has promised to root out dangerous illegal aliens. show more