Prospects for ICE deal sour on Capitol Hill as shutdown deadline nears for critical agency

Kraig Pakulski 0 17 Article rating: No rating

By Sarah Ferris, Ted Barrett, Manu Raju, CNN

(CNN) — For a fleeting moment in Washington, top Democrats believed last week they could reach a deal with the GOP to set new limits on President Donald Trump’s nationwide immigration enforcement after federal agents killed two US citizens in Minnesota.

That hope is mostly gone inside the US Capitol.

Congress’ push for a bipartisan deal to scale back federal immigration officers’ powers is now in doubt, with Speaker Mike Johnson ruling out two of Democrats’ biggest demands after the deaths of Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Johnson is among many Republicans who are refusing Democrats’ demands to stop searches without a judicial warrant and unmask ICE officers in public. Instead, many GOP lawmakers are issuing their own must-haves, like language to end so-called sanctuary cities – a nonstarter for Democrats.

Johnson said Tuesday that Republicans are “never” going to agree to requiring that ICE agents obtain warrants from a judge, rather than simply getting the greenlight from a Trump administration official.

“It is unimplementable. It cannot be done, and it should not be done. It’s not necessary,” he said.

Democrats, meanwhile, are insisting they cannot accept anything but dramatic reforms to the Department of Homeland Security that can satisfy the national uproar from their base.

Now, both parties are anticipating a nasty standoff over the DHS budget when its current funding runs out in just two weeks. Tensions are quickly rising on Capitol Hill as the two sides harden their positions, with growing odds of a DHS shutdown that could snarl airport traffic and leave the Coast Guard and Secret Service without pay.

The biggest question now is whether the two sides can come up with a funding bill that any Democrats can support — or whether the department is headed for its third shutdown in less than a year.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune said Tuesday afternoon that it will be very difficult to get a deal over ICE by the deadline and it might take a miracle.

“There’s always miracles, right? Maybe things will come together and we’ll be able to vote on something at the end of the two weeks,” Thune told reporters. “I think that would be overly optimistic, based on my experience.”

Asked about whether Republicans can reach a deal by mid-February, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise seemed even more downbeat.

“Democrats have been the party of defunding the police for a long time. They’ve been clear for years that they don’t want to fund law enforcement of any kind,” Scalise told CNN.

It’s not even clear how the negotiations will proceed: Thune has said it is up to House and Senate Democrats to work with the White House, while one top Democrat involved in DHS funding – Sen. Chris Murphy – has said the onus is on GOP leaders in Congress to come to his party.

“That’s up to them. They’re in charge. They need to convene some serious negotiations,” Murphy said of Thune and Johnson. But the Connecticut Democrat made clear he isn’t giving up on the talks: “Let’s sit down, let’s sit at the table.”

Another Democrat, Rep. Jason Crow of Colorado, voiced exasperation at what he described at the GOP’s shifting tune on the talks. Asked Tuesday about Johnson throwing cold water on some of Democrats’ demands, Crow said, “They continue to not operate in good faith, right?”

“Over and over and over again,” he said, “you feel like Charlie Brown trying to kick the football, right? And they’re moving it all the time.”

So far the only bipartisan agreement appears to be over ICE officers wearing body cameras – something that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem Read more

Penny the Doberman Pinscher outshines the field to claim Best in Show at 150th Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show

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By Kevin Dotson, CNN

(CNN) — Penny the Doberman Pinscher was named Best in Show at the 2026 Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show on Tuesday.

The competition as stiff, and as the seven finalists took one last lap around the arena, the tension was thick enough to cut with a knife.

The New York crowd seemed to reserve their loudest cheers for the four-year-old Doberman Pinscher, and in the end, she prevailed and became the 42nd female to win the prestigious Best in Show award. It marked the fifth time a Doberman has taken the top prize at Westminster.

Emerging from the Working group, Penny beat out 2,499 other canines spread across seven different groups containing 204 total breeds to win the coveted prize.

“She is as great a Doberman as I’ve ever seen,” said Penny’s handler Andy Linton, who was also the handler of the last Doberman Pinscher to win Best in Show at Westminster 37 years ago in 1989.

The 150th edition of the America’s oldest continuously-held dog show (and second-oldest sporting event in the country behind the Kentucky Derby) was once again staged in New York City at famed Madison Square Garden in Manhattan.

The Best in Show winner is chosen by a single judge. This year’s judge, David Fitzpatrick, had to decide between the winners of the respective seven varying groups – Herding, Hound, Non-Sporting, Sporting, Terrier, Toy and Working.

Fitzpatrick awarded Reserve Best in Show to Cota the Chesapeake Bay Retriever, winner of the Sporting group.

“You know they often say ‘what a great lineup,’” Fitzpatrick said of the finalists. “But this is one that will go down in history.”

The remaining group winners were:

Herding group: Graham the Old English Sheepdog

Hound group: Zaida the Afghan Hound

Non-sporting group: JJ (short for Jingle Juice) the Lhasa Apso

Terrier group: Wager the Smooth Fox Terrier

Toy group: Cookie the Maltese

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Son of Libya’s late dictator Gadhafi shot dead by gunmen, political team says

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Saif al-Islam Gadhafi

By Nic Robertson, Mohammed Tawfeeq, CNN

(CNN) — Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, the son of former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, has been killed in an apparent assassination at his home in the city of Zintan in northwestern Libya, the head of his political team said on Tuesday. He was 53.

Saif al-Islam Gadhafi was once seen as the heir-apparent to his dictator father –– who was executed after his regime was toppled at the height of the Arab Spring protests in 2011 –– and had in recent years been making a play to return to politics in Libya.

Four masked assailants stormed Saif al-Islam Gadhafi’s residence and disabled security cameras before fatally shooting him in a “treacherous and cowardly” attack, his political advisor Abdullah Othman said in a social media statement.

No official confirmation has been issued by Libyan authorities, and there has been no immediate comment from the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has long sought the younger Gadhafi’s arrest on charges of crimes against humanity.

Born on June 25, 1972, in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi was the second son of Moammar Gadhafi, who ruled Libya from 1969 until his overthrow and death in 2011.

On February 21, 2011, as protests spread across Libya, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi delivered a televised address warning of civil war, chaos and poverty if the uprising continued. The speech marked a decisive break from his reformist persona and aligned him publicly with the regime’s violent crackdown on demonstrators.

In June 2011, the ICC issued arrest warrants for both Saif al-Islam Gadhafi and his father for crimes against humanity committed during the suppression of the revolt.

After the fall of Tripoli, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi evaded capture for several months before being detained in November 2011 by a militia in the western Libyan city of Zintan.

He remained in custody there until June 2017, when the militia announced his release under a controversial general amnesty law passed by Libya’s House of Representatives.

In November 2021, he reemerged on the political stage, registering as a candidate in Libya’s long-delayed presidential election.

His candidacy sparked sharp divisions, with supporters portraying him as a symbol of stability and opponents denouncing him as a reminder of authoritarian rule and unresolved war crimes. The elections were later postponed indefinitely amid political deadlock and security concerns.

Ahead of his death, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi had aspired to one day return to political life and in recent months had begun to put together “a proposal for reconciliation,” a source close to him told CNN.

In Tuesday’s statement, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi’s team urged the Libyan judiciary, the international community, the United Nations and human rights organizations to launch an independent and transparent investigation to identify and prosecute those responsible.

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Netflix’s antitrust hearing morphed into a culture-war fight over ‘wokeness’

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By Liam Reilly, Brian Stelter, CNN

(CNN) — Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos on Tuesday faced skeptical lawmakers during a Senate hearing on his company’s pending $83 billion deal to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming and studio assets.

While many senators grilled Sarandos over antitrust issues, labor concerns and consumer prices, several conservative members focused instead on unsubstantiated accusations that Netflix promotes “woke” content and “transgender ideology.”

The culture-war attacks echoed claims made by MAGA influencers urging President Donald Trump to block the deal — and may preview how the administration could seek to stall the merger. (CNN, which is owned by Warner Bros. Discovery, is not part of the transaction.)

Sen. Eric Schmitt told Sarandos that Netflix has created “the wokest content in the history of the world,” adding that the streaming giant has “made a habit of promoting DEI and wokeness” and “oversexualizes for kids.”

“The overwhelming majority of your stuff is overwhelmingly woke, and it’s not reflective of what the American people want to see,” Schmitt said. “Why in the world would we give a seal of approval or a thumbs up to make you the largest behemoth on the planet related to content?”

Sarandos disputed the claims, saying Netflix “has no political agenda” and offers a wide range of programming “left, right and center,” as customers can see by browsing the service.

Sen. Josh Hawley asked Sarandos why “so much of Netflix content for children promotes a transgender ideology.”

When Sarandos told Hawley that his claim was “inaccurate,” and that the platform features “a wide variety of stories and programs to meet a wide variety of people’s taste,” Hawley responded that “almost half” of Netflix’s children’s programming features “this highly controversial, highly sexualized material.”

Hawley did not provide a source for his “almost half” statistic, but his claims mirror an anti-Netflix report produced by a conservative outlet originally created by the Heritage Foundation.

The report, shared with allies ahead of the Tuesday hearing, accused Netflix of “social engineering through entertainment” and repeated many familiar right-wing critiques.

Conservative influencers with close ties to the Trump administration laid the groundwork for MAGA opposition to the merger in December by depicting a Netflix-Warner combination as a “monopoly.” MAGA podcaster Benny Johnson said the combined company would “push trans ideology, race guilt, and anti-family messaging straight into your living room.”

That narrative continued Tuesday despite Sarandos’s best efforts to describe the reality of Netflix’s content slate.

Sen. Ted Cruz also attacked Netflix as a “left-wing company,” citing its multi-year production deal with Barack and Michelle Obama, and warning the merger would create “a propaganda outlet pushing one particular political view with much greater market power.”

Netflix executives have frequently pointed out that it’s in their corporate interest to appeal to a politically diverse audience, and thereby keep people paying for the service.

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