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    Housing bill limbo, Venezuela earthquakes and voting rulings

     
    TODAY’S POLITICS story

    Trump cancels housing bill signing, denying GOP a win

    What happened
    President Donald Trump yesterday abruptly scrapped a signing ceremony for a newly passed bipartisan housing bill, citing the Senate’s failure to clear the “desperately needed” SAVE America Act voting overhaul. His announcement on social media “caught lawmakers and some staff by surprise,” The Washington Post. Republican leaders were “touting the housing bill at a news conference” and a flag-festooned stage was ready for him in the Capitol. Trump later fumed about the stalled voting bill during a contentious lunch with Senate Republicans.

    Who said what
    Trump was supposed to “spike the football,” but “instead, he fumbled,” Politico said. The signing ceremony “would have been a boon to Republicans desperate for campaign trail affordability wins,” and even “his own staff spent the morning taking a very public victory lap.” Trump is fixated on the voting bill, but rarely has one of his “late curveballs seemed as ill-advised,” said CNN. 

    It “makes no sense” that Trump would hold the housing bill “hostage” for legislation that “will never pass in this Congress,” Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) told reporters. But “there is a huge group of people who really appreciate what the president’s doing right now, and it’s the Democrat Party.”

    What next?
    Trump “does not need to sign” the housing bill, which will “become law” 10 days after he officially receives it unless he issues a veto, Politico said. But such low-key enactment would “deny Republicans a chance to crow at a signing ceremony.” 

     
     
    TODAY’S NATURAL DISASTER story

    Dual earthquakes rock Venezuela, killing dozens

    What happened
    Powerful back-to-back earthquakes in Venezuela yesterday evening collapsed buildings in Caracas and other cities, sending people rushing out to the streets. Acting President Delcy Rodríguez said in a televised address that 32 people were confirmed dead and more than 700 were injured, but she didn’t yet have numbers for the “hardest-hit region” of La Guaira.

    The U.S. Geological Survey said the initial magnitude 7.2 quake was followed less than a minute later by a magnitude 7.5 temblor, the biggest to hit Venezuela since 1900. “High casualties and damage are probable,” USGS said, with the death toll likely in the thousands. 

    Who said what
    “We urge our population to remain calm,” Rodríguez said. “We urge unity.” Simón Bolívar International Airport outside Caracas sustained heavy damage and was closed, she said, and train, subway and residential gas services were suspended. School was also canceled for the rest of the week. Traveling through Caracas this morning, said New York Times correspondent María Victoria Fermín, “I saw neighborhoods with no lights on and streets flooded by burst water pipes.” 

    What next?
    The U.S. was among several countries that promised aid, search-and-rescue help and rebuilding assistance. “We will be there for our new and great friends,” President Donald Trump said on social media. “Early reports are not good!!!”

     
     
    TODAY’S VOTING RIGHTS Story

    Courts deal Trump new setbacks in voting takeover

    What happened
    The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday ruled that Michigan was not obligated to turn over confidential voter information to the Trump administration, siding with lower court judges in Michigan and eight other states where similar requests were blocked. In Boston, U.S. District Judge Denise Casper yesterday permanently barred President Donald Trump from implementing most of an executive order seeking to overhaul how states run elections. The Constitution “does not grant the president any specific powers over elections,” she wrote. 

    Who said what
    Yesterday’s appellate decision was the “biggest setback yet” in the Trump administration’s effort to create its own nationwide voter roll, CNN said. That endeavor is part of a so-far unsuccessful “administration-wide push” by “Trump and his allies to find evidence of voter fraud,” The New York Times said. But they’ve run into “significant headwinds — and stern rebukes” — from “judges appointed by presidents of both parties,” including five Trump appointees.

    What next?
    A second election-related executive order Trump issued to create a national voter list and limit mail ballot “also faces multiple legal challenges,” The Associated Press said. Postmaster General David Steiner yesterday told a Senate panel that under a proposed Trump-ordered rule, the U.S. Postal Service would not deliver mail-in ballots to states that declined to turn over private voter data.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Flamingos are again thriving in Turkey’s Lake Tuz, an important breeding ground, after a revitalization campaign. The birds love the lake’s salty and shallow waters, but in 2021, thousands of hatchlings died there due to high temperatures and a lack of rain. To protect future hatchlings, the government began pumping water into nesting spots, and it’s paying off. About 5,000 young flamingos are now at the lake, more than double the amount spotted in June 2025.

     
     
    Under the radar

    The growing US military footprint in Australia

    The U.S. military will include Australia in a global pre-positioning program for weapons, ammunition and vehicles for the first time, according to Agence France-Presse. This “growing U.S. footprint” is “important in terms of building our own military capability,” Australian Defense Minister Richard Marles told reporters in Western Australia. But critics, like University of Sydney international affairs expert James Curran, are asking whether Australia is “acting like America’s 51st state.”

    Although Australia does not permit foreign military bases on its soil, it hosts U.S. Marines for exercises in the northern city of Darwin for six months of the year, and a “rotating force” of U.S.-commanded submarines will arrive in Western Australia next year, said AFP. If the U.S. and China “come to blows over Taiwan,” said The Wall Street Journal, the naval base in Western Australia “offers a berth” that would bring American nuclear-powered submarines “close to the fight” and provide a “haven if things go wrong.”

    There’s “little political appetite” for a “massive increase in Australian defense expenditure,” said John Blaxland, an international security professor at Australian National University, to AFP. So “facilitating greater U.S. investment in Australian real estate is widely considered to be the most prudent approach to take.”

    But if Australia changes its mind, there are “precedents” for close allies withdrawing permission for U.S. access to jointly operated military bases and airspace, Curran wrote in Australia’s Financial Review. Spain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait have all restricted Washington’s use of such facilities, and Australia “could, if it so chose, do the same.”

     
     
    On this day

    June 25, 1978

    The first version of the rainbow pride flag was flown in the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade. The flag, designed by Gilbert Baker, has become a key symbol of the LGBTQ+ rights movement. The original flag’s eight colors have been pared down to six, and several variations have also been created for specific groups.

     
     
    TODAY’S newspaperS

    ‘Trump irked’

    “Records counter Trump claim of vandals at Reflecting Pool,” The New York Times says on Thursday’s front page. “Trump refuses to sign bill on housing,” the Los Angeles Times says. “Trump irked by vote on Iran war,” says the Chicago Tribune. “Iran war fallout difficult to tally,” says USA Today. “Rocked by the Iran war, the UAE sours on Trump,” The Washington Post says. “Israel stands ground on troops in Lebanon,” the Arizona Republic says. “AI boom sparks new wave of inflation,” The Wall Street Journal says. Anti-ICE “felony protester case ends with fine,” The Minnesota Star Tribune says. “On verge of graduation, they get no break from ICE,” The Boston Globe says. “ICE arrests mother, 8-year-old,” says the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

    ► See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    Tall tale

    Picture of guilt

    A drug bust turned into an art boon when French police discovered a stolen Pablo Picasso painting during a narcotics raid. Authorities said the work, owned by a woman from Singapore, is part of a series of portraits Picasso made of his lover Marie-Thérèse Walter. Six people were arrested after the raid, including a security guard who told police he took the Picasso from its Paris storage facility to “expose weaknesses in the company’s security,” said artnet.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Catherine Garcia, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Chas Newkey-Burden, Rafi Schwartz, Peter Weber and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Saul Loeb / AFP via Getty Images; Manaure Quintero / AFP via Getty Images; John Whitney / NurPhoto via Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images
     

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