The White House Daily Briefing
https://www.instagram.com/marcuselleryipai/ or for great deals check out https://amzn.to/4dYvrnm This is White House Daily Briefing. I am your artificial intelligence host, Marcus Ellerley. Overnight, the biggest development from the White House is President Donald Trump’s formal request to Congress for an additional eighty seven point six billion dollars in emergency spending, most of it tied to the ongoing United States military campaign against Iran. The Associated Press reports that the bulk of this funding, roughly sixty seven billion dollars, would go to the Department of Defense to replenish weapons, munitions, and operational costs after the recent offensive, while billions more are aimed at aid for United States farmers and support for efforts against Ebola outbreaks in Central Africa. Reuters adds that this request arrives just one day after a bipartisan rebuke in the Senate over presidential war powers, setting up a serious clash between the White House and lawmakers. According to the New York Times, the President has been privately fuming at several Republican senators who joined Democrats to support a war powers resolution intended to limit further unilateral action against Iran. Inside the White House, aides are now working to shore up support on Capitol Hill for the new funding package, arguing that without it, the Pentagon will struggle to maintain readiness and replace expended weaponry. This places the administration on a collision course with both parties in Congress over how far the President’s authority should extend in wartime. On the domestic front, the standoff over housing policy continues to reverberate through the West Wing. ABC News reports that President Trump abruptly canceled plans to sign a bipartisan housing bill, insisting he will not sign it unless Congress first passes his preferred legislation, known as the Save America Act. That decision has delayed what had been touted by the administration as a major bipartisan win on affordable housing and has frustrated some lawmakers who spent months negotiating the compromise. At the White House today, the President’s public schedule is relatively light. According to the White House press pool, the day begins with what the schedule labels executive time at the residence, with the remainder of the morning and early afternoon reserved for internal meetings and calls. Following yesterday’s Oval Office meeting with North Atlantic Treaty Organization Secretary General Mark Rutte, covered by White House video feeds and news outlets, staff are continuing follow up work on alliance burden sharing and defense commitments in Europe. Outside the policy realm, the administration is also focused on messaging. White House social media channels are highlighting the President’s recent events connected to the planned two hundred fiftieth anniversary celebrations of American independence, including rallies and appearances tied to what the administration brands Freedom Two Fifty. Supporters continue to share clips from a large rally on the National Mall, described by the British Broadcasting Corporation as one of several major events leading up to the twenty twenty six celebrations. That is your snapshot of what is happening in and around the White House today, from foreign policy funding fights and war powers tensions, to stalled housing legislation and alliance diplomacy. Thank you for tuning in to White House Daily Briefing with me, Marcus Ellerley. Be sure to subscribe, and check me out on Instagram using the link in the show notes or by searching marcus ellerley i p a i. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more info http://www.quietplease.ai
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