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  • Senate GOP leaders face spending squeeze on Trump’s big bill: From the Politics Desk

    Senate GOP leaders face spending squeeze on Trump’s big bill: From the Politics Desk


    Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the White House, Capitol Hill and the campaign trail.

    Happy Monday and welcome to our first edition of June! The Senate is back this week and will begin the process of taking up the “big, beautiful bill” the House passed. Sahil Kapur breaks down the challenges facing GOP leaders as they try to send the legislation to President Donald Trump’s desk by July 4. Plus, Scott Bland digs into the archives for a quote from the 2016 campaign trail from a Republican that provides a guide for Democrats today.

    Sign up to receive this newsletter in your inbox every weekday here.

    — Adam Wollner


    Senate GOP leaders face spending squeeze on Trump’s big bill

    By Sahil Kapur

    The House-passed legislation for President Donald Trump’s domestic agenda is moving to the Senate, where Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., is facing a squeeze from opposing party factions about how to modify it.

    Spending and the debt: Some Republicans say they want steeper spending cuts to offset the debt increase as a result of the tax breaks and funding bumps for immigration enforcement and the military. That includes Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., both of whom have said they cannot support the bill in its current form as it adds an estimated $2.3 trillion to the debt.

    “It’s wrong. It’s immoral. It has to stop,” Johnson said Sunday on Fox News. “My loyalty is to the American people, to my kids and grandkids. We cannot continue to mortgage their future.”

    Medicaid: On the other hand, Thune must navigate worries and political considerations from senators about the existing spending cuts in the legislation — particularly on Medicaid, SNAP and clean energy funding.

    Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, voted for the Senate’s initial budget blueprint to begin work on the bill, but later objected to a revised version, citing concerns that it could impact her constituents who rely on Medicaid coverage.

    Collins is up for re-election in 2026, along with Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Joni Ernst, R-Iowa. All are likely to face attacks from Democrats about the stricter burdens for Americans to stay on the health care program.

    And at least one solid Trump ally from a red state is warning against rolling back Medicaid. “I’ve got some concerns,” Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., told reporters recently. “I continue to maintain my position; we should not be cutting Medicaid benefits.”

    Hawley notably told NBC News last month he’s fine with “coverage losses” resulting from the work requirements and anti-fraud measures. So he may ultimately get in line with the bill, as Trump and Republican leaders are portraying the Medicaid provisions as program integrity measures, instead of cuts to rescind coverage.

    Regardless, Hawley’s vocal support for preserving Medicaid benefits creates a potential land mine for Republicans to maneuver around, making it harder to cut deeper than the House bill if they want more savings to appease spending hawks.

    Clean energy: As part of the spending caution, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, says there is a faction of GOP senators who opposes the “termination” of the clean energy tax credits passed by Democrats in 2022, which Republican leaders have put on the chopping block to finance their bill.

    Getting technical: And there’s a procedural hurdle Thune must navigate: The so-called “Byrd bath.” Senate rules limit bills under the “reconciliation” process — which Republicans are using here to bypass Democrats in the Senate — to budgetary measures that are primarily about dollars and cents, not policy changes. Democrats are preparing to challenge a host of provisions in the package.

    In the end, the three-vote margin for defection may give Thune the breathing room he needs to pass the bill. But any changes the Senate makes need to go back to the House for another vote in the paper-thin majority.

    And Thune is on deadline, as the Treasury Department has said Congress needs to pass a debt ceiling increase — which is part of the broader package — no later than July in order to prevent a catastrophic default.

    Up until now, the GOP’s deadlines have all been fuzzy. But this one is real.

    Related read: Thune says Senate on track to pass GOP megabill by July 4, by Frank Thorp V


    A key lesson Democrats can learn from 2016 candidate Marco Rubio

    Analysis by Scott Bland

    Then-presidential candidate Donald Trump passes behind Sen. Marco Rubio during a commercial break at a primary debate
    Donald Trump and Marco Rubio during a Republican presidential primary debate in Detroit on March 3, 2016.Paul Sancya / AP file

    Democrats are in regroup mode after losing the 2024 election, acutely aware of the party’s low standing with the American public and thinking through everything from their policy platform to where and how they talk to voters — like the $20 million pitch reported by The New York Times for a research project titled “Speaking with American Men: A Strategic Plan.”

    More power to them, if someone wants to fund it. And Democrats desperately want to do something to move forward right now.

    They might want to consider some long-ago advice from one Marco Rubio about what really matters for a political party’s viability — and why it could take an excruciatingly long time to get there.

    When Rubio — currently President Donald Trump’s secretary of state — was running for president in August 2015, he gave a prescient response to questions about then-candidate Donald Trump’s rhetoric about immigration. Asked by CNBC whether the way Trump and others were talking about immigrants would hurt the Republican Party in the 2016 general election, Rubio said, “This is not the Republican Party. These are individual candidates who are responsible for their own rhetoric and what they say,” adding, “The face of the Republican Party is going to be our nominee.”

    Rubio hit a similar theme days later, speaking to Bloomberg News in New Hampshire: “Ultimately the Republican Party will reach out to all voters based on who our nominee is. And I don’t believe Donald Trump will be our nominee.”

    Don’t be distracted by the admittedly big thing that Rubio got wrong. The broader point is that American political parties are shaped and defined by their candidates.

    The biggest and best thing that the Democratic Party can do to change voter perceptions of itself is to nominate a national candidate that voters see more favorably. The party can’t just erase former President Joe Biden’s struggles and former Vice President Kamala Harris’ loss to Trump — especially among the slice of Democrats fed up with their own party right now, a big contributor to those record-low poll numbers. That’s just stuck to the Democratic brand right now.

    Of course, Democrats aren’t going to nominate another presidential candidate for three years or so. Perhaps that’s why some are itching to get that contest started sooner rather than later. Even formally nominating the party’s next slate of congressional or Senate contenders is a year or so away.

    It’s no wonder that research and investment efforts are getting a lot of attention — on the long road to fixing a party brand, that’s what’s available right now.


    🗞️ Today’s top stories

    • ⚫ Boulder attack: A man who shouted “free Palestine” and used a “makeshift flamethrower” on demonstrators marching in support of Israeli hostages held by Hamas was charged with a federal hate crime and first-degree murder in Colorado. Follow live updates →
    • ⚖️ SCOTUS watch: Trump’s agenda is shaping the Supreme Court’s traditional monthlong ruling season, as consequential emergency cases flood the docket. Read more →
    • ⚖️ SCOTUS watch, cont.: The high court decided not to hear two big gun cases, a decision that allows restrictions on assault-style weapons in Maryland and large-capacity magazines in Rhode Island to remain in effect. Read more →
    • ⚕️ Obamacare wars: Congressional Republicans are facing new pressure to extend expiring tax credits under the Affordable Care Act. If the money lapses this year, 5 million Americans would be expected to lose coverage and others would face premium hikes. Read more →
    • 🍎 Big Apple battle: New York Lt. Gov. Antonio Delgado launched a primary challenge against Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul. Read more →
    • 💰 2028 watch: Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., launched a new national political action committee to fight back against Trump and the GOP. Read more →
    • 🤖 Conspiracy corner: Over the weekend, Trump reposted a baseless claim on Truth Social that former President Joe Biden was executed in 2020 and replaced with clones or robots. Read more →
    • Follow live politics coverage →

    That’s all From the Politics Desk for now. Today’s newsletter was compiled by Adam Wollner and Ben Kamisar.

    If you have feedback — likes or dislikes — email us at [email protected]

    And if you’re a fan, please share with everyone and anyone. They can sign up here.




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  • Israeli official says IDF fired ‘warning shots’ near Gaza aid distribution center

    Israeli official says IDF fired ‘warning shots’ near Gaza aid distribution center



    On Sunday, four witnesses told NBC News journalists in Gaza that the Israel Defense Forces opened fire on a group of Palestinians receiving food from a collection point in Rafah, in the south of the enclave. At least 31 Palestinians were killed and more than 200 were wounded in the event, according to Gaza hospitals director Mohammed Zaqout.

    Witnesses who spoke to NBC News described a chaotic scene.

    Ahmad Abu Labdeh, 28, said an Israeli tank had fired into the crowd.

    “They told us to come and collect aid, and when we gathered, they opened fire on us,” he said. “It was hell.”

    The reports were vigorously denied by the IDF and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the U.S. and Israel-backed organization that was distributing the aid.

    In a statement issued Monday, the GHF said “there were no injuries, fatalities or incidents” during their operations on Sunday.

    “We have yet to see any concrete evidence that there was an attack at or near our facility yesterday and that evidence-based reporting should be at least the minimum requirement for news outlets,” the GHF said.

    U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee blasted the media for their reporting on the incident, saying the outlets are contributing to “the antisemitic climate” in the country.



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  • LAPD seeks group of men in another attack on a transgender woman

    LAPD seeks group of men in another attack on a transgender woman



    The Los Angeles Police Department is asking for the public’s help to find a group of men who they say attacked a transgender woman over the weekend and are believed to be the same people who attacked her in April.

    According to LAPD, the group involved in a previous attack returned to the victim’s location on May 31 at around 11:38 p.m. in the Westlake District of Los Angeles.

    They assaulted the 61-year-old, leaving her with serious injuries. The group left the scene before authorities arrived.

    According to the LAPD, one of the suspected attackers entered the victim’s store on April 8 and began flirting with her. But once she rejected his advances, he left and later returned, pushing her to the ground.

    “The suspect sexually assaulted the victim and discovered she was a transgender woman. The suspect pulled away and threatened to kill the victim,” the LAPD said.

    The same man allegedly returned to the victim’s location several times along with other men and committed other hate crimes against the victim which included striking her with a skateboard, deploying pepper spray, and throwing an unknown liquid substance at her while another man attempted to stun her with a Taser.

    Detectives believe there may be other unidentified victims and are seeking the public’s help in identifying the suspected attackers and released their photographs.

    Anyone who may have been a victim or has additional information regarding the identification of the suspects, is urged to contact Rampart Division Robbery Detectives at 213-484-3495. During non-business hours or on weekends, calls should be directed to 1-877-LAPD-24-7 (1-877-527-3247).

    Anyone wishing to remain anonymous should call the L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (800-222-8477) or go directly to www.lacrimestoppers.org. Tipsters may also download the “P3 Tips” mobile application and select the L.A. Regional Crime Stoppers as their local program.

    This article originally appeared on NBC Los Angeles.



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  • Sean Combs’ former assistant returns to stand in sex trafficking trial

    Sean Combs’ former assistant returns to stand in sex trafficking trial


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  • Marc Maron to end his ‘WTF’ podcast this fall

    Marc Maron to end his ‘WTF’ podcast this fall



    Marc Maron announced Monday that he would end his acclaimed podcast, “WTF With Marc Maron,” after nearly 16 years.

    In the latest episode of the popular show, Maron said he and producer Brendan McDonald made the decision to end the podcast sometime this fall.

    “It was not some kind of difficult decision, necessarily,” Maron told comedian John Mulaney, who was his guest on the episode. “Neither me nor Brendan, who are the only people in charge of this operation on every level… we both realized together that we were done.”

    Maron’s show, which celebrates its anniversary Sept. 1, broke ground while the medium of podcasting was still in its infancy.

    Since its launch in 2009, Maron has recorded more than 1,600 episodes, with guests such as former President Barack Obama, rock star Keith Richards and comedian Carol Burnett. An episode he did with Robin Williams was entered into America’s National Recording Registry as the first one-on-one podcast episode.

    Maron’s decision to end the “WTF” podcast comes as podcasts are taking over TV screens amid video formats’ increasing popularity.

    The medium first emerged in the mid-2000s and remained a small, niche market for years before several hits, including “Serial,” gave the medium a jolt of attention and gravitas. While 2023 was a tough year for podcasts as a whole, popular podcasts retained — and in some instances grew — their audiences in 2024.

    “We’re tired, we’re burnt out, and we are utterly satisfied with the work we’ve done,” Maron said during Monday’s episode. “We’ve done great work.”

    However, Maron said that he is not necessarily retiring from podcasting.

    “This doesn’t mean I’m never going to do something like this again,” he said. “It doesn’t mean I’ll never, you know, have talks like I do here, or or some kind of podcast at some point in time. But for now, we’re just, uh, we’re wrapping things up. It’s OK. It’s OK to end things.”

    “And thankfully,” he said, while talking about McDonald, “we both realized together that we were done.”



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  • Canadian wildfires trigger air quality alerts across the U.S.

    Canadian wildfires trigger air quality alerts across the U.S.



    Air quality alerts continue from Minnesota and Michigan all the way to South Carolina due to smoke from wildfires in Canada.

    Over 180 fires scattered across Canada are actively burning, with 91 burning out of control, according to the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre, a nonprofit that supports the government’s wildfire response. The fires have burned over 3,700,000 acres from the beginning of the year to present day.

    Over the weekend, hazy skies could be seen over Minneapolis and Duluth, and an air quality alert was issued for all of Minnesota on Monday by the state’s pollution control agency.

    In Grand Rapids, Michigan, the National Weather Service warned residents that outdoor grills, chain saws and ATVs “have the potential to throw a spark and ignite a dangerous and destructive fire.”

    The haze from the Canadian wildfire smoke drifted all the way into the deep South of the U.S., with the NWS on Sunday reporting a “red sunrise” in the Charleston, South Carolina, area.

    Poor air quality means sensitive groups such as pregnant people, newborns, older adults or those with respiratory or heart problems should limit their time outdoors.

    The poor air quality will continue for Michigan, Minnesota and South Carolina through Monday night.



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  • Trans athlete wins two girls events at California track and field finals

    Trans athlete wins two girls events at California track and field finals



    The federation announced the change after Trump threatened to pull federal funding from California unless it bars trans female athletes from competing on girls teams. The federation said it decided on the change before then.

    The U.S. Department of Justice also said it would investigate the federation and the district that includes Hernandez’s high school to determine whether they violated federal sex discrimination law.

    California law allows trans students to compete on sex-segregated sports teams consistent with their gender identity.

    The federation said the rule opens the field to more “biological female” athletes. One expert said the change may itself be discriminatory because it creates an extra spot for “biological female” athletes but not for other trans athletes.

    The federation did not specify how it defines “biological female” or how it would verify whether a competitor meets that definition.

    Sophia Lorey, outreach director with California Family Council, was among those at the stadium Saturday. She said the federation’s policy is not a fix for the issue and only ends up causing more confusion.

    “At the end of the day,” Lorey said, “it shows the girls that we know this is wrong and we’re still letting it happen to you.”

    Hernandez told the publication Capital & Main this month that she cannot worry about critics.

    “I’m still a child, you’re an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person,” she said.

    Other students break records

    California’s championship stands out from that of other states because of the sheer number of competitors. The state had the second-largest number of students participating in outdoor track and field in the nation during the 2023-2024 school year, behind Texas, according to a survey by the National Federation of State High School Associations.

    The boys 100-meter heats also were a highlight, with junior Jaden Jefferson of De La Salle High School in Concord finishing in 10.01 seconds Friday, 0.19 seconds faster than a meet record set in 2023. But he fell just shy of making it count as a meet record with a final time of 10.27 seconds in Saturday’s final.

    Athletes set new meet records in several events, including boys and girls relay races, hurdle competitions and the boys pole vault.



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  • Magnus Carlsen drops his first match against India’s chess champion

    Magnus Carlsen drops his first match against India’s chess champion



    It was the fist slam heard ’round the chess world.

    Two of the titans of chess — one, the up-and-coming champion versus arguably the greatest player of all time — squared off over the weekend in a game that has drawn attention not just for its result but for the post-game reaction.

    Magnus Carlsen, the top-ranked chess player in the world, lost for the first time in the classical (think long, complex games) format to Gukesh Dommaraju, the current world champion who at 19 years old is seen as among the game’s brightest young stars.

    The game, which came as part of the Norway Chess 2025 tournament, swung after Carlsen lost a knight, leading to a frantic endgame in which each player had only seconds left on their clocks.

    With Gukesh in a clearly winning position, Carlsen expressed his frustration in a manner relatable to most anyone who has ever played chess: With a fist to the table.

    Carlsen then offered a handshake of resignation before standing up and offering another relatable exasperation: “Oh my god,” along with an apology.

    While the game probably wouldn’t have made the same waves without Carlsen’s reaction, the loss does offer a growing sense of Gukesh’s rise. But it also offers some sense of just how dominant Carlsen remains at the age of 34.

    In an interview immediately after the match, Gukesh detailed his shock at winning the game, which at one point looked hopeless for him.

    “There wasn’t much I could do,” he said. “It was just clearly lost, so I was just trying to make moves which were tricky for him, and luckly he got into time scramble.”

    “99 out of 100 times I would lose,” Gukesh added.

    Others in the chess community offered a bit more support for Gukesh’s performance.

    Gukesh also reportedly told Chess.com that he could relate to Carlsen’s reaction: “I’ve also banged a lot of tables in my career!”

    Carlsen retains his title as the top-ranked player by the International Chess Federation (FIDE), which calculates ratings based on performances across sanctioned tournaments. Carlsen is also a five-time world chess champion, a title awarded for winning the game’s most presitigious tournament (The Candidates Tournament) and besting the current world champion (or with the current champion beating the winner of the Candidates).

    Carlsen declined to defend the title in 2022, with China’s Ding Liren taking the top spot only to be defeated by Gukesh in 2024. Then only 18, Gukesh became the youngest world champion in history.

    That has meant something of a natural rivarly between the two.

    Carlsen has previously praised the Indian phenom, noting recently in an appearance on the podcast The Joe Rogan Experience that Gukesh “works his a– off all time time” but also is not as strong as some of the shorter time formats that have gained in popularity and prestige in recent years.

    Along with the embrace of shorter time formats, chess has boomed online, with a boom in coverage and content creators who analyze games in real time and provide plenty of commentary.

    And with Carlsen still by far the game’s top star, a blunder and loss — and reaction — like the one to Gukesh has sparked its own compilations of reactions.



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  • Why the MIND diet beats Mediterranean in protecting against dementia

    Why the MIND diet beats Mediterranean in protecting against dementia



    New evidence finds that the MIND diet lives up to its name, even when it is started later in life.

    Middle-aged and older participants in a large, long-term study were less likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease or other types of dementia if they followed a diet filled with green, leafy vegetables, olive oil, whole grains and lots of berries, according to a report presented Monday at the annual meeting of the American Society for Nutrition.

    Researchers from University of Hawaii at Mānoa and the University of Southern California discovered that adhering to the MIND diet, which combines the Mediterranean diet with the blood-pressure-lowering DASH diet, results in a stronger and more consistent reduction in dementia risk than what is seen with other healthy diets.

    The new findings suggest it’s never too late to switch to a healthy diet, said the study’s lead author, Song-Yi Park, an associate professor at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa. “It shows that sticking to a healthy diet, as well as improving the health of the person’s diet over time, is very important for older adults who want to prevent dementia.”

    While all the Mediterranean-related diets appear to be good for the brain, the MIND dietary pattern was specifically designed for brain health.

    “One important difference is that MIND includes berries, which have been linked to brain health,” Park said.

    The MIND diet, or Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay, scores individual foods based on how protective they are and how much is eaten. Berries — especially strawberries and blueberries — for example, get a score of 1 if two or more servings are consumed per week. The score drops to 0.5 if just one serving per week is consumed and a score of 0 if none are.

    A person’s individual diet gets an overall rating by adding up the scores for individual foods. The higher the overall score, the better it’s for the person’s brain.

    Park and her colleagues turned to data from nearly 93,000 U.S. adults who had provided information about what they ate as part of a research project known as The Multiethnic Cohort to get a closer look at how diet influenced the risk of developing dementia.

    The Multiethnic Cohort was started in the early 1990s through a joint effort of the University of Hawaii Cancer Center and the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center. The men and women enrolled in the study came from five ethnic/racial populations: Japanese Americans, Native Hawaiians, Black Americans, Latinos and whites.

    At the outset, the 215,000 participants were ages 45 to 75. When data for the new study was analyzed, more than 21,000 participants had developed Alzheimer’s or a related dementia.

    At the beginning of the study, people who scored higher for adherence to MIND had a 9% lower risk of developing dementia.

    The amount of reduction varied among the racial groups in the new analysis. Greater risk reduction, 13%, was seen in participants who identified as Black, Latino or white.

    Participants who improved their adherence to MIND over the 10-year period had a 25% lower risk of dementia compared with those whose adherence declined, and that trend was seen across all age and racial groups.

    How to follow the MIND diet

    Some suggestions for reaching the optimal score for the MIND diet, according to a 2015 study:

    • Leafy green vegetables, such as kale, spinach, broccoli, bok choy and mustard: six or more servings per week
    • Other vegetables: one serving per day
    • Nuts, such as almonds, walnuts or pistachios: five or more servings per week
    • Cheese: less than one per week
    • Whole grains: three or more per day
    • Fish (not fried): one or more servings per week
    • Red meat: less than one serving per week
    • Fast fried foods: less than one per week
    • Pastries and sweets: less than five servings per week

    Park cautioned that like all observational studies, the new research reports an association and doesn’t prove that the diet prevents dementia.

    It is a high-quality study, Dr. Walter Willett, a professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and a professor of medicine at the Harvard Medical School, said in an email.

    “It adds to the evidence that a Mediterranean-type diet has important benefits for reducing the risk of dementia,” said Willett, who wasn’t involved in the research. “The differences between groups defined by race/ethnicity may well be due to random variation, so at this time it’s reasonable to assume that this healthy dietary pattern has benefits for all groups.”

    When it comes to leafy green vegetables, it’s probably best to consume a variety rather than a single type, Willett said.

    “In particular, spinach is good in many ways, but has high oxalate content and high intake of spinach can cause kidney stones,” he said.

    In general, the MIND diet is in line with the principles of the two diets it’s built from, said Dr. Yian Gu, an associate professor of neurological sciences at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center. “Each of those diets has unique characteristics,” she said.

    The Mediterranean diet emphasizes multiple daily servings of fruits and vegetables, along with whole grains, legumes, olive oil, seafood, and nuts and seeds, such as chia, flax, pumpkin and sesame.

    DASH, or Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension, is meant to prevent hypertension, so it emphasizes low salt, which isn’t a major component in the Mediterranean diet.

    The MIND diet is easy to follow, Gu said, encouraging people to pick the green, leafy vegetables they prefer. What’s important is to increase the diversity of vegetables.

    Another benefit of Mediterranean-type diets: They are helpful with other types of chronic disease, including heart disease and cancer, she said.



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  • Some Americans are shifting their summer plans to avoid tariff price hikes

    Some Americans are shifting their summer plans to avoid tariff price hikes



    Summer looks a little different this year for some Americans who say they are dialing back their leisure activities and shopping sprees due to tariffs.

    Since taking office for his second term, President Donald Trump has ordered a number of sweeping tariffs, including a blanket 10% tariff on all imports, that have driven up costs on various products. He has also threatened additional tariffs, which has resulted in volatility in the stock market and continued concern from consumers about their personal costs.

    “The tariffs are making high prices even more unreasonably high, to the point where … what you’re charging is not even close to what this is worth,” said Raina Becker, 49, a recently laid-off writer who now works as a freelance copy editor in upstate New York. Becker said she was hoping to invest in a new summer wardrobe. “And I can’t in good faith do it, because I can’t afford to spend my money like this.”

    The apparel industry has taken an especially hard hit from Trump’s tariff program because a vast majority of clothing, shoes and accessories are manufactured in places like China, Vietnam and India before being shipped to the U.S.

    Like Becker, Mei Wu, 31, who lives in Los Angeles, realized she can’t splurge on shopping this year. She had her eye on a $170 dress from the Australian brand VRG GRL as an outfit for her June birthday party. But when she saw that another $277.95 would be tacked on to the price because of tariffs, she decided not to purchase it.

    “The bottom line is, I do think that we deserve to be able to buy where we want to buy without getting punished for it. How we spend our money is totally up to us, and at the end of the day we work hard for what we bring to the door,” said Wu, a content creator who described her shopping dilemma as a “first world problem,” but one that is frustrating all the same.

    A recent consumer pulse report from the accounting firm KPMG, which surveyed 1,516 U.S. consumers, found that “in response to tariffs, 50% are cutting back on purchases, and 49% are actively seeking deals and discounts.” When asked specifically about summer plans, many said they are still choosing to travel — but have otherwise cracked down on personal expenses.

    “We’re seeing a more selective and cost-conscious summer travel season,” Duleep Rodrigo, KPMG’s consumer and retail leader, said in a statement in the report. “Vacations are still in the budget — but nearly everything else is on the chopping block.”

    Trump’s tariff policies are facing a number of legal challenges in court, with some judges calling them unlawful. However, a federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily paused rulings by a panel of judges that, just hours earlier, halted several of the president’s tariffs on international trading partners.

    As Americans wait for news of whether tariffs will continue to be imposed, they are still hoping to have fun during summer.

    Patrice LaBelle Lester, 29, is spending the next few months planning her October vow renewal celebration. But she’s being more frugal with her budget.

    For example, she said she found a way to order faux flowers — which were being shipped from China — in bulk without paying the surcharge caused by tariffs. Originally, the price was $300. With tariffs, they skyrocketed to about $1,700.

    So the content creator found a different vendor who would be willing to cover the cost of the tariffs so Lester could stay within her original budget. But she said she was warned that because the flowers would have to be shipped by cargo freighter, rather than by plane, there would be a delay in receiving them. Lester said she’s also hoping to grow her family, which means she wants to purchase a new car over the summer.

    “I know Trump said he was only giving, I guess, a tax break to those that buy an American-made car, but it’s hard to kind of support that in this political climate,” said Lester, who lives in San Antonio, Texas. “So it’s impacting me in that way, because that is a purchase I would like to make in the next few months.”

    For Becker, there has been one unexpected perk of reeling in her spending: getting to do more activities that bring people together.

    “A number of people are talking about, again, myself included, hoarding craft supplies for our various hobbies,” she said, reflecting on how changes in her spending have also realigned her values. “The silver lining in all this is that it can, if done correctly, build community.”



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