Center Square: Illinois House Speaker: ‘Mr. Trump, tear down this fence!’ [Video]

The speaker of the Illinois House has compared a fence outside U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Broadview to the Berlin Wall.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/illinois-house-speaker-mr-trump-tear-down-this-fence/vi-AA1Oq3vV

Black Enterprise: Hundreds Of CDC Staff Layoffs Reversed After Trump Admin Blunder

Of the 1300 people initially notified that they were being laid off, only 600 were actually a part of this round of workforce reduction.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/hundreds-of-cdc-staff-layoffs-reversed-after-trump-admin-blunder/ar-AA1OrjK2

Inquisitr: Donald Trump Makes Bizarre Joke About Ivanka’s Marriage and Conversion [Video]

Donald Trump surprised many with a bizarre joke about Ivanka’s marriage and her conversion to Judaism, offering an unusual glimpse into his personal views during a recent speech. 

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/donald-trump-makes-bizarre-joke-about-ivanka-s-marriage-and-conversion/vi-AA1Oqlix

RegTechTimes: Wrongfully jailed for 40 years, a man tastes freedom for minutes before ICE takes him away

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/wrongfully-jailed-for-40-years-a-man-tastes-freedom-for-minutes-before-ice-takes-him-away/ar-AA1Oq1s1

USA Today: MAGA balked at Team Trump’s Qatari air force base. So now it’s a ‘fake story.’ | Opinion

The official Trump administration message is that Qatar will have an air force base built in Idaho. Except, not really.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/columnist/2025/10/14/hegseth-qatari-base-idaho-vance-interview/86673752007

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/maga-balked-at-team-trump-s-qatari-air-force-base-so-now-it-s-a-fake-story-opinion/ar-AA1OqaTL

Moneywise: ‘Can’t even afford to pick them’: Florida farmers plowing over perfectly good tomatoes as tariffs cause prices to plummet. How farmers are reacting

Tony DiMare’s family owns 4,000 acres of tomato farms across Florida and California. Sadly, his Florida crops are not looking good — mowed over and left to rot, like tomato vines across the state.

But it’s not growing conditions that are the problem. It’s economic ones.

DiMare told WSVN 7 Miami that President Donald Trump’s tariff and immigration policies are driving farmers to abandon their crops.

In January, he warned that Trump’s crackdown on migrants would squeeze farmers, who rely on migrants to pick produce.

“We have to secure our borders south and north, but you have to have a workforce in this country,” he told the Financial Post.

Deportations devastate farm workforce

About 50% of farm workers in the U.S. are undocumented migrants — including skilled supervisors and machine operators — according to Farmonaut, a farm technology company.

As the Trump administration proceeds with mass deportations of undocumented migrants, there are far fewer pickers in the fields, and crops are left to go bad.

One spoke to WSVN about fellow migrants leaving Florida each day. He spoke on condition of anonymity, concerned he might be deported himself

“A lot of people are really afraid, and sometimes they come, sometimes they don’t come,” he said. “And the harvest is lost because it cannot be harvested.”

The labor shortage also means Florida farmers have to pay more for labor. At the same time, they’re getting less money for their produce due to Trump’s tariff policies.

Tariffs upset traditional supply chain

From January through April, Trump’s threatened tariffs triggered Mexican suppliers to double or even triple tomato exports to the U.S. — before tariffs went into effect.

The result? The U.S. market was flooded with Mexican tomatoes. Florida farmers saw the wholesale price of a box of tomatoes plummet from $16 per box to $3 or $4. DiMare said tomato farmers need around $10 or $11 per box to break even.

“You can’t even afford to pick them right now,” said Heather Moehling, president of the Miami-Dade County Farm Bureau. “Between the cost of the labor and the inputs that goes in, it’s more cost-effective for the farmers to just plow them right now.”

It’s not just Florida tomato growers feeling the pinch. Canada has imposed a 25% tariff on U.S. watermelons in retaliation for Trump’s tariffs on Canadian products. DiMare knows one watermelon grower who’s lost Canadian customers to Mexican watermelon suppliers as a result.

Prepare for higher food costs

Farmonaut notes that the impacts of tariffs and immigration policy on farmers will have a knock-on effect in grocery stores. If U.S. farmers don’t have enough workers to harvest crops, Americans will have to buy more imported produce, and pay more due to tariffs.

The Food Policy Center at Hunter College of New York City warns that the resulting surge in food prices will drive inflation — “stressing household budgets across the nation, and particularly hurting families in areas with high food insecurity.”

While farmers have few options but to hope the political upheaval will end, consumers should prepare to mitigate those costs.

One way to do that is to buy a membership in a Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) organization. You’ll be supporting local farmers and getting local, less costly produce delivered to your door.

In addition to shopping frugally by clipping coupons and shopping sales flyers deals, you can get creative in the kitchen. For example, you can limit food costs by planning weekly menus around seasonal and affordable foods.

https://moneywise.com/news/economy/florida-farmers-now-plowing-over-perfectly-good-tomatoes-as-trumps-tariff-policies-cause-prices-to-plummet

CBS News: ICE targets NYC immigration courts more than others, analysis suggests [Video]

New York City has seen 460 Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrests this year that likely took place in immigration courts, according to a new analysis of federal data. Julia Ingram, a data journalist for CBS News Confirmed, has more.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ice-targets-nyc-immigration-courts-more-than-others-analysis-suggests/vi-AA1OeOqF

NBC News: Mike Johnson calls Obamacare funds a ‘boondoggle’ as shutdown drags on

Johnson also addressed conservative calls to repeal Obamacare, whose enhanced tax credits form the main dispute between the two parties that led to the funding impasse.

Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., slammed the expiring Obamacare subsidies at the center of the government funding standoff a “boondoggle” as the shutdown approaches the two-week mark with no end in sight.

“The Covid-era Obamacare subsidy that they’re all talking about that’s supposedly the issue of the day doesn’t expire until the end of December. And by the way, it is the Democrats who created that subsidy, who put the expiration date on it,” he told reporters at a press conference on Monday, the 13th day of the shutdown.

“They put an end date on it because they knew it was supposed to be related to Covid, and it’s become a boondoggle,” Johnson added. “When you subsidize the health care system and you pay insurance companies more, the prices increase.”

Johnson’s comments escalate the battle one day before the Senate is slated to return to Washington, albeit with no clear path to end the shutdown. It will test the patience and resolve of both parties as federal employees — including law enforcement, air traffic controllers and TSA staff — are slated to miss paychecks

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., has maintained that Democrats won’t relent and support a short-term GOP funding bill through Nov. 21 unless it includes their priorities, most notably an extension of the health care funds. The money in question, first passed in 2021, limits premiums of a benchmark insurance plan to 8.5% of the buyer’s income.

“Speaker Johnson chose vacation over fixing this healthcare crisis,” Schumer recently wrote on X. “In his own state, 85,000 Louisianans will lose their health insurance and thousands will see their premiums skyrocket. But he’s keeping the government shut down instead of fixing this.”

Johnson has kept the Republican-led House out of session since Sept. 19, and he is continuing the recess through this week, drawing heavy criticism from Democrats and even some Republicans who say they want to return to work.

The speaker said Monday that at a minimum, “If indeed the subsidy is going to be continued, it needs real reform. But there’s a lot of ideas on the table to do that.”

He didn’t get specific, but Republicans have discussed a range of ideas such as an income cap for eligibility, a requirement that every Obamacare enrollee pays something into the system, a phase-out after two or three years, and stricter abortion limits.

Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., the author of a bill to extend the Obamacare, or Affordable Care Act, funds permanently, said she’s open to a negotiation on the details.

“There are a number of changes that can be made to the program to address some of the concerns,” she said. “One of the things, though, I think we need to be very thoughtful about is where you start to make changes that show a dramatic drop off in numbers of people who are helped. And that needs to be a longer discussion that people need to really look at some data and get the information before making decisions about that.”

But Shaheen flatly ruled out stricter abortion restrictions, saying existing law already blocks Obamacare funding for abortion — despite some conservatives wanting to make it more stringent.

“That’s a nonstarter,” Shaheen said. “It’s not an issue. We already dealt with that issue.”

Shaheen, a longtime critic of shutdowns who is standing with Schumer in opposition to the GOP bill, said it’s not viable to wait until the end of the year to act on the Obamacare funding, as insurers are setting rates for 2026 now.

“People are getting their premium increases right now, and it’s one more thing on top of the cost of food and electricity and rent and child care and all the other expenses that people are incurring,” Shaheen told NBC News.

Republicans control the Senate by a margin of 53-47, but they need 60 votes to break a filibuster and pass a funding bill. They are currently five Democratic votes short, and have seen no movement since the shutdown began on Oct. 1.

In response to Republicans branding it the “Schumer shutdown,” the Democratic leader replied, “Republicans control the Senate, the House, and the White House.”

Implied in Schumer’s comments is that Republicans can abolish the 60-vote threshold in order to re-open the government if they refuse to negotiate to get Democratic votes. But GOP party leaders are deeply reluctant to use the “nuclear option” on the legislative filibuster, as that would permanently change the Senate and set a precedent conservatives fear they’ll regret when Democrats return to power.

“The super-majority requirement is something that makes the Senate the Senate,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., told reporters on Friday. “And honestly, if we had done that, there’s a whole lot of bad things that could have been done by the other side.”

“If the Democrats had won the majority, they probably would have tried to nuke the filibuster, and then you’d have four new United States senators from Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. You’d have a packed Supreme Court,” Thune said. “You’d have abortion on demand.”

Johnson also weighed in on growing calls on the right to repeal Obamacare, a longstanding goal of conservatives, and said in a lengthy answer to NBC News that “Obamacare failed the American people” and that the system needs “dramatic reform.”

“Can we completely repeal and replace Obamacare? Many of us are skeptical about that now, because the roots are so deep. It was really sinister, the way, in my view, the way it was created,” he said on Monday. “I believe Obamacare was created to implode upon itself, to collapse upon itself.”

His response came one day after House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., posted on X: “House Republicans are now scheming to repeal the Affordable Care Act. And take away healthcare from tens of millions of Americans. How did that work out for the extremists the last time they tried it?”

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/mike-johnson-slams-obamacare-funds-boondoggle-shutdown-drags-rcna237366


The Republicans — led by fascist asshole Mike Johnson — want to double healthcare costs for millions of families.

Fuck you and rot in Hell, Mike Johnson, you fascist piece of shit!

Bloomberg: Inside America’s Multi-Billion Dollar Immigration Detention System [Video]

President Donald Trump’s new deportation push has fueled record spending on detention facilities. We talk with the CEO of CoreCivic, one of the nation’s largest private prison firms, and look at how immigration policy is impacting his business. We also visit a community that hosts a major detention facility, and discuss the ongoing debate over profit and human rights.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/other/inside-america-s-multi-billion-dollar-immigration-detention-system/vi-AA1OhdCv

Slingshot News: ‘I Wrote About Osama Bin Laden’: Trump Shows Signs Of Dementia, Claims He Predicted 9/11 With Teenage Pete Hegseth In Remarks At Norfolk [Video]

During his remarks to Navy sailors at Naval Station Norfolk several days ago, Donald Trump claimed that he told Pete Hegseth about Osama bin Laden and 9/11 a year before it happened. Around that time, Hegseth was just 19 or 20 years old. Also, Trump did not predict 9/11.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/i-wrote-about-osama-bin-laden-trump-shows-signs-of-dementia-claims-he-predicted-9-11-with-teenage-pete-hegseth-in-remarks-at-norfolk/vi-AA1OmIhV