YOUR MORNING NEWS ROUNDUP | |
Quick look at Wednesday's news: |
| • | The federal government shut down at midnight. | | • | Life in Broadview, Illinois, has been transformed amid ICE presence. | | • | This WNBA star's exit interview was the news conference heard around the world. | |
A government shutdown begins |
There's no end to a government shutdown in sight as Democratic lawmakers demand health care policy changes that President Donald Trump and Republicans have refused to entertain. |
What is a government shutdown? Each fiscal year, Congress appropriates funds for federal agencies to operate. If Congress does not agree on appropriations or a temporary spending bill, federal agencies must effectively shut down or stop normal spending. |
| • | How we got here: Both sides traded barbs over who is to blame. Democrats have demanded the reversal of Medicaid cuts that Republicans passed this year and the extension of health care subsidies be included in a funding measure. | | • | Some Americans awake to uncertain employment. Trump said he may lay off "vast numbers" of federal workers and eliminate programs in a shutdown. | | • | What happens Wednesday? The Senate will reconvene this morning, while the House won't be in session at all. Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, is keeping lawmakers in recess in order to pressure Democrats. | |
USA TODAY has everything you need to know during a shutdown: | U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders (I-VT) after taking part in a Senate vote in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday. Jonathan Ernst, REUTERS |
| • | A judge ruled Trump's deportation moves against pro-Palestinian students were unconstitutional. | | • | Homes collapsed as waves from hurricanes Imelda and Humberto slam North Carolina. | | • | How will "TrumpRx" lower drug prices? | | • | A year after a USA TODAY investigation, a rape kit backlog persists. | |
Hegseth rips Pentagon 'decay' and 'fat generals' | President Donald Trump threatened firings and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth lambasted "decades of decay" at the Pentagon as they spoke before a silent audience of hundreds of top military commanders who'd traveled from around the world on short notice to hear them at a Quantico, Virginia military base. Hegseth, who took the podium first before a billboard-sized American flag, unveiled his major policy priorities, telling the country's military elite that new measures would weed out political correctness among the world's most powerful armed forces. Critics said the gathering was a waste of taxpayer dollars and dangerous to national security | US military generals and senior officers gathered in Quantico, Virginia, on Tuesday. JIM WATSON, AFP via Getty Images |
Chicago suburb tells ICE they want them out |
'A lot of rhetoric comes from the White House about being tough on crime, but from where I sit, ICE has generated criminal activity in Broadview.' |
~Katrina Thompson, mayor of the small village of Broadview outside Chicago home to a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility, saying federal agents the area amount to a "siege." Tense moments between the two sides in Broadview have frequently ended with federal agents deploying chemical agents and other crowd control tactics on protesters as well as journalists. | Federal agents and protesters speak through a fence outside a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in Broadview, Illinois, on Sept. 29, 2025. Michael Loria, USA TODAY |
What did Napheesa Collier say about the WNBA? | In her end-of-season comments this week, Minnesota Lynx forward Napheesa Collier called out WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert and the league's lack of transparency, in addition to officiating concerns, player safety, and stalled CBA negotiations. Collier, who currently serves as the WNBPA vice president, said she decided to publicly air her grievances after repeated concerns she voiced directly to Engelbert went ignored. Collier made it clear that she was speaking for herself — but fellow WNBA players, coaches and former stars are now speaking up in support of Collier. | Lynx forward Napheesa Collier (24) drives on Phoenix Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas (25). Rick Scuteri, Imagn Images |
Photo of the day: Halloween hype 🎃 |
October is here and so are Trader Joe's Halloween-themed mini canvas bags. Here's how to get one of the viral totes. | Trader Joe's new Halloween Canvas Mini Totes. Provided by Trader Joe's |
Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY, sign up for the email here . Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@usatoday.com. | | Federal workers placed on a mandatory furlough and in a non-pay status can file for unemployment benefits. Not so for 'essential' workers. | | After years of feeling gaslit and dismissed, Make America Healthy Again activists see their beliefs promoted at the White House. | | | | Swift's team and company partners are flooding fans with Easter eggs and surprises as she readies her 12th studio album. | | | | Beloved children's series "Reading Rainbow" is back with a new host. Mychal Threets, a librarian who went viral during the pandemic, will take the helm. | | | | The first month of the college football season is in the books and some teams are off to bad starts. Our five biggest disappointments. | | | | "All I Want For Christmas is..." Mariah Carey's new album 'Here For It All." Here's how to get her 16th studio album and concert tickets. | | | | USA TODAY's daily news podcast, The Excerpt, brings you a curated mix of the most important headlines seven mornings a week. | | | | Our app gives you award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, eNewspaper and more. | | | | | Try our free Quick Cross! | Test your best time on our miniature crossword or check out one of our other games. | | | | |
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