Live updates: Trump and Netanyahu agree on a plan to end Gaza war and await Hamas to accept terms
President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday they’ve agreed to a plan to end the war in Gaza but it’s unclear whether Hamas will accept the terms.
Trump’s plan has been presented to Hamas, which is reviewing it in ‘good faith’, an official told AP.
Trump on Monday laid out a 20-point plan for ending the Israel-Hamas war and establishing a postwar Gaza governance. Trump’s plan would also establish a temporary governing board that would be headed by Trump and include former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The plan does not require people to leave Gaza and calls for the war to end immediately if both sides accept it.
It also calls for all remaining hostages to be released by Hamas within 72 hours of Israel accepting the plan. Trump says Israel would have the “full backing” of the United States to take steps to defeat Hamas if it doesn’t accept the proposed peace deal.
Other news we’re following:
- Federal government may shut down Tuesday: Leaders of both parties will meet with Trump Monday afternoon in a late effort to avoid a shutdown, but both sides have shown hardly any willingness to budge from their entrenched positions. Democrats are using one of their few points of leverage to demand Congress to extend health care benefits.
- Trump will address top military leaders: The president will speak to hundreds of generals and admirals who have been summoned by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth from all over the world to Quantico, Virginia, with little notice. A White House official was not authorized to discuss the president’s plans before a public announcement about his attendance and spoke on condition of anonymity.
- National Guard deployed to Portland: A Pentagon spokesperson said 200 members of the Oregon National Guard are being placed under federal control and will serve for 60 days “to protect U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other U.S. Government personnel who are performing Federal functions.” The deployment is being made over the objections of state leaders and is similar to one last summer in Los Angeles.
Agencies can fire workers during a shutdown, personnel office says
Guidance from Trump’s Office of Personnel Management says federal offices can engage in “reduction in force” activities during a federal shutdown.
The Office of Management and Budget headed by Russ Vought had already advised agencies to prepare for mass firings, or RIFs.
According to the personnel office guidance, “OMB has determined that agencies are authorized to direct employees to perform work necessary to administer the RIF process during the lapse in appropriations as excepted activities.”
JUST IN: Trump plan to end Israel-Hamas war has been presented to Hamas, which is reviewing it in ‘good faith,’ official tells AP
Netanyahu leaves the White House
The Israeli prime minister departed around 4 p.m., after meeting with Trump and publicly declaring his support for the president’s plan to end the Israeli-Hamas war.
Still no word from Hamas on whether it, too, accepts the plan.
Shutdown would furlough more than half of US-based State Department personnel
The State Department expects to furlough more than half of its remaining direct-hire personnel in the United States if the federal government shuts down this week.
If that happens, U.S. embassies and consulates abroad will remain open and able to provide services to American citizens needing assistance and no permanent layoffs are foreseen, the department said.
According to a 71-page plan posted to its website Monday, the department said that only 10,344 of 26,995 domestically employed staffers whose work has been deemed essential will be exempted from the shutdown furloughs.
Employees deemed to “excepted” from shutdown plan are those whose jobs are necessary to respond to emergencies and national security.
Schumer heads to the White House, claiming Trump has ‘felt the heat’
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer is making his way from Capitol Hill to the White House for a meeting with President Donald Trump on the potential for a government shutdown.
“They have felt the heat,” Schumer, a New York Democrat, told reporters. “We finally got our meeting. We hope they’re serious about getting something real done on health care.”
Any negotiations will also have high stakes for Schumer as he tries to show that Democrats can gain concessions from the Trump administration, while also facing an approaching government shutdown if Democrats don’t vote for government funding legislation.
GOP committee chair says nothing good comes from a shutdown
“Democrats are walking into what I would call a dumb fight,” Republican Rep. Tom Cole of Oklahoma, who chairs the powerful House Appropriations Committee, told reporters in a briefing at the Capitol.
Cole recounted past shutdowns, including the longest, in 2018-19, over Trump’s demand for border wall funds, a 16-day shutdown in 2013 over failed GOP efforts to repeal and replace Obamacare, and the short weekend 2018 shutdown by Democrats over immigration.
None of them achieved their stated goal, he said.
‘’There’s just there’s no good that comes in the government shutdown,” he said.
Trump and Netanyahu end news conference without taking questions

Reporters raise their hands to ask questions as President Donald Trump concludes a news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the State Dining Room of the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
After each leader spoke at length, Trump suggested that it was “not really appropriate to take questions,” citing his already full agenda for the rest of the day.
That’s despite reporters having packed the room and waited for much of the afternoon for the opportunity to ask Trump and Netanyahu questions.
Trump then hinted that he might change his mind, and even asked Netanyahu if he’d like to take a question from a “friendly” Israeli reporter.
But the prime minister responded, “I would go by your instinct. We’ll have enough time for questions. Let’s settle the issue first.”
The pair left the room, ignoring dozens of shouted questions from reporters, as White House press officials tried to restore order by yelling, “Thank you, press!”
Trump once again says Iran will join Abraham Accords despite much opposition
Trump said one of the topics he and Netanyahu discussed during their closed-door meeting Monday was Iran and its recent war with Israel.
For months, Trump has been pushing for an expansion of the Abraham Accords he mediated during his first term as president, even going as far as saying that Iran could be among the regional players to join the effort.
But Iran, which has engaged in a deadly proxy war with Israel for decades, has vehemently rejected any effort to even acknowledge the state of Israel, often labeling the country as a “regime.”
Hostages’ families welcome Trump’s ceasefire plan
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum says the proposal is a “historic agreement that will allow our people to heal, end the war, and chart a new future for the Middle East.”
The grassroots group, which represents many of the hostages’ families, called on Netanyahu to immediately halt the fighting in Gaza to prevent harm to their loved ones.
“There is no reason to risk their lives when Israel has adopted President Trump’s historic initiative,” it said.
Netanyahu says he supports Trump’s plan to end war in Gaza

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a news conference with President Donald Trump in the State Dining Room of the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
The Israeli leader, in his opening remarks, said to Trump: “I support your plan to end the war in Gaza which achieves our war aims.”
He said the plan will ensure that “Gaza never again poses a threat to Israel,” with Hamas being disarmed and Gaza being demilitarized.
There is still no word from Hamas on the plan.
Netanyahu said if Hamas doesn’t accept the plan or doesn’t comply, “then Israel will finish the job by itself. This could be done the easy way, or it could be done the hard way. But it will be done.”
Netanyahu opens with praise for Trump, accepts his peace proposal
“You’ve proven time and again what I’ve said many times. You are the greatest friend Israel has ever had in the White House,” the Israeli prime minister said.
“I support your plan to end the war in Gaza,” Netanyahu added.
JUST IN: Trump and Netanyahu say they’ve agreed to a plan to end the war in Gaza but it’s unclear whether Hamas will accept terms
Trump goes into long aside, including slamming of UN, as Netanyahu waits to speak on Gaza plan
More than 20 minutes into his bilateral press conference with Netanyahu, Trump touched on a number of subjects beyond the Israel-Hamas war as his Netanyahu stood by him, waiting to make his first remarks.
Trump used the time to once again blast the United Nations for an inoperative teleprompter during his address last week.
He also celebrated U.S. funding cuts to various U.N. programs, including one that provides aid to Palestinians.
Trump: Gaza’s people have ‘had a rough life with Hamas’ but could have ‘a brighter future’

President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the State Dining Room of the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
“There are many Palestinians who wish to live in peace,” Trump said.
The president, partly reading from prepared remarks and partly speaking off-the-cuff, said his plan would give the Palestinian people a chance to have that peace.
“I challenge the Palestinians to take responsibility for their destiny because that’s what we’re giving them. We’re giving them responsibility for their destiny,” he said.
Trump says Israel would have the US’s ‘full backing’ to destroy Hamas if the group rejects his plan
The president said that if the militant group does not accept the plan, Israel “would have my full backing” to “finish the job of destroying the threat of Hamas.”
“Bibi, you’d have our full backing to do what you would have to do,” Trump said, referring to Netanyahu by his nickname.
But he said he hoped they’d have a peace deal.
JUST IN: Trump says Israel has ‘full backing’ of US to take steps to defeat Hamas if it doesn’t accept proposed peace deal
Trump says Netanyahu has agreed to his plan

President Donald Trump arrives with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a news conference in the State Dining Room of the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Trump, in his opening remarks, said he wants to thank the Israeli prime minister for agreeing to the plan.
“Today is a historic day for peace,” Trump said. “Let’s call it eternal peace in the Middle East.”
Netanyahu has not yet spoken or confirmed he has agreed to the plan.
White House releases plan to end Israel-Hamas war
The White House released its 20-point plan to end the war in Gaza and establish governance for Gaza moving forward.
It wasn’t immediately clear if Israel or Hamas has approved the plan, which was released shortly before Trump’s news conference with Netanyahu.
The plan calls for a temporary governing board that would be headed by Trump and include former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. It wouldn’t require people to leave Gaza if they don’t want to, and calls for the war to immediately end if both sides accept.
JUST IN: White House releases Trump plan for ending Israel-Hamas war and Gaza governance; no word on Israel or Hamas acceptance
With Epstein files petition one signature short, House Dems demand new member’s swearing in

Arizona Democratic candidate Adelita Grijalva speaks to supporters after being declared the winner against Republican Daniel Butierez to fill the Congressional District 7 seat held by the late U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva in a special election Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
House Democratic Whip Katherine Clark sent a letter to Speaker Mike Johnson on Monday, urging him to reschedule House votes this week so that Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva can be officially sworn in.
Grijalva, a Democrat from Arizona, was elected last week to succeed her father, the late U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva. She has pledged to sign a discharge petition to compel the release of all federal files related to Jeffrey Epstein – a petition currently just one signature short of the required threshold.
“Any delay in swearing in Representative-elect Grijalva unnecessarily deprives her constituents of representation and calls into question if the motive behind the delay is to further avoid the release of the Epstein files,” wrote Clark.
‘Mine, baby mine': Trump administration again boosts coal
Officials said Monday they will open 13 million acres of federal lands for coal mining and provide $625 million to recommission or modernize coal-fired power plants, as Trump continues his efforts to reverse the yearslong decline in the U.S. coal industry.
Under Trump’s orders, the Energy Department has required fossil-fueled power plants in Michigan and Pennsylvania to keep operating past their retirement dates to meet rising U.S. power demand amid growth in data centers, artificial intelligence and electric cars.
The latest announcement would allow those efforts to expand.
Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said the initiative would fulfill a Trump promise to “mine baby, mine.”
▶ Read more on the Trump administration’s plans for coal mining
Netanyahu coalition partner praises the attack in Qatar
By JOE FEDERMAN
Israel’s far-right national security minister has defended Israel’s attack in Qatar following Netanyahu’s apology to the Gulf state.
Itamar Ben-Gvir, a key coalition partner of Netanyahu’s, says the attempt to strike Hamas’ leaders was “an important, just and ethical attack.”
“It is very good that it happened,” he wrote on X.
Netanyahu apologizes for Israeli strike inside Qatar targeting Hamas leaders
By MATTHEW LEE, JOE FEDERMAN
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has apologized to Qatar for an airstrike Israel conducted against Hamas operatives in Qatar earlier this month in Doha.
Diplomatic sources familiar with the matter said Netanyahu spoke by phone with Qatari Emir Mohammed Bin Abdulrahman al-Thani to express regret over the strike that killed at least one local Qatari security guard. The call came as Netanyahu was meeting with Trump to discuss a new plan to end the war in Gaza between Israel and Hamas.
The sources spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a private diplomatic conversation.
Qatar and other Arab nations condemned Israel’s strike and said it dealt a significant blow to efforts to end the conflict in Gaza.
JUST IN: Netanyahu calls Qatari prime minister to apologize for Israeli strike targeting Hamas officials in Doha, AP sources say
Republican governors urge Senate Democrats to pass ‘clean’ funding measure
Republican governors are urging Trump and Senate leaders to avoid a federal government shutdown.
A letter signed by 25 GOP executives echoes White House calls for the Senate to pass a continuing resolution that would extend government operations beyond a Tuesday deadline.
Democrats want a deal to include reversals of pending Republican health care cuts.
In their letter, the Republican governors accuse Democrats of holding “the federal government funding hostage” and risking “immediate consequences in every state across America that cannot be overlooked.” The letter notes that Democrats “did vote for this funding extension just six months ago.”
At that point, Republicans hadn’t yet passed Trump’s sweeping domestic policy bill, which includes future Medicaid cuts and didn’t preserve expiring tax subsidies for people who buy health insurance in Affordable Care Act exchanges.
Democrats see the current funding fight as leverage on those matters, and they believe that Trump ultimately would be blamed for any extended shutdown and potential layoffs of federal workers.
Egypt and UAE leaders say they hope Trump plan can end the war in Gaza
The leaders of Egypt and the United Arab Emirates on Monday expressed their support to an initiative by Trump to end the war in Gaza.
That’s according to a statement from the Egyptian presidency following talks in Cairo between President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi and his Emirati counterpart, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed.
According to the statement, both leaders affirmed “the importance of supporting this peaceful initiative, that paves the way for achieving a lasting and comprehensive peace in the region.”
The statement didn’t offer details about Trump’s proposal.
Palestinian ambassador expresses support for Trump’s peace efforts

Palestinian Ambassador to the United Nations Riyad Mansour speaks with other attendees at the beginning of High-Level week of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly at United Nations headquarters, Monday, Sept. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Angelina Katsanis)
Riyad Mansour, the Palestinian ambassador to the U.N., expressed Palestinian officials’ readiness Monday to work with Trump and Arab countries in bringing an end to the war.
“Let us not delay a single minute more in doing what is necessary for this just peace to replace the unbearable reality of today,” Mansour said during a U.N. Security Council meeting on the Middle East.
He added, “President Trump also expressed clear rejection of annexation, which we welcome.”
Israel protesters urge Trump to end the Gaza war
Dozens of protesters gathered outside the U.S. diplomatic office in Tel Aviv are calling on President Donald Trump to end the war and bring home the remaining Israeli hostages held in Gaza.
Protesters hoisted large posters of the hostages, blew horns and pounded on drums.
“Bring them home now,” the crowd chanted. “Why are they still there?”
Einav Zangauker, whose son Matan is among the hostages, said Trump is the families’ best hope.
“Fight for us President Trump. Force a full agreement on Netanyahu and the end of the war,” she said.
Trump administration brings back some school mental health grants
After ending $1 billion in grant funding for student mental health initiatives this spring, the Education Department is making $270 million of the money available for new bids.
The funding was originally part of gun control legislation that passed in the aftermath of the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting. It helped districts train and retain school counselors, psychologist and social workers, but the Trump administration said its goals for diversity in hiring conflicted with its priorities.
The new grants are available to support school psychologists, but not counselors or social workers. The new guidelines also state that recipients may not use the money for “gender ideology,” political activism or racial stereotyping.
The end of the mental health grants was challenged in a lawsuit that is still pending.
ICE says the man killed in Dallas shooting last week was from El Salvador
The agency identified the 37-year-old man who was shot and killed while being transported in an Immigration and Customs Enforcement van as Norlan Guzman-Fuentes.
ICE said Monday that it wasn’t known when or where Guzman-Fuentes entered the country. It said he was arrested on criminal charges in 2012 in Florida and in 2020 in Texas.
The agency said he was transferred to ICE custody on Sept. 24 after Dallas police arrested him in August.
Guzman-Fuentes was killed when a gunman opened fire Wednesday on the Dallas immigration field office. Two other detainees were critically wounded and the gunman fatally shot himself.
West Bank settlers hold out hope for annexation
Yossi Dagan, an influential settler leader, is in Washington with a delegation of settler officials.
He tells Israel’s Channel 14 that the delegation is pressing Netanyahu to oppose the establishment of a Palestinian state and to push for Israeli annexation of the West Bank.
Trump has rejected the idea of annexation — a longtime wish of Israel’s settler movement — in recent days.
The House is gone — but on the phone
House GOP leaders are holding a private conference call with lawmakers late morning as shutdown threats grow.
Republicans sent lawmakers home after having already approved their temporary government funding measure some weeks ago, putting pressure on the Senate to simply pass the package.
But senators rejected the House-passed bill from Republicans, as well as a Senate Democratic alternative.
Netanyahu arrives at White House
By MICHELLE PRICE

President Donald Trump, left, greets Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House, Monday, Sept. 29, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Trump came outside to greet the Israeli prime minister, shaking his hand for an extra beat as the two spoke to each other.
They eventually turned toward waiting news cameras and each gave a thumbs up.
In response to a shouted question about whether Trump was confident they’d be able to get a Gaza peace deal and Trump appeared to mouth, “I am.”
Trump told Netanyahu: “You look great.”
“So do you,” Netanyahu responded.
Trump official blasts Security Council session ahead of Netanyahu meeting
Mike Waltz, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., criticized the Security Council for holding a meeting Monday on Israel’s settlement activity in the West Bank, saying it was a mere distraction from U.S. efforts to end the Gaza war.
“Unfortunately colleagues, today’s meeting is yet another example of this council’s obsessive focus on Israel,” Waltz said, adding that the “constant drumbeat of meetings” only distracts from the work needed to address issues of international peace and security.
As the sole defender of Israel’s actions on the 15-member council, the U.S. stood alone once again in failing to condemn the expansion of settlement and settler violence against Palestinians.
This comes as Trump is set to meet with Netanyahu after he vowed not to allow Israel to annex the occupied West Bank.
Democrats push White House to save health care programs
Jeffries called the health care cuts a “five alarm fire” that are rippling across communities nationwide.
The Democratic leader laid down the marker in talks as nothing short of a “permanent extension” of the subsidies that have helped millions of Americans buy health insurance on the Affordable Care Act exchanges.
Democrats have also pushed to rollback Medicaid cuts from Trump’s big tax breaks and spending cuts bill that’s now become law.
Those COVID-era ACA subsidies are set to expire in a matter of months if Congress fails to act.
Jeffries said Democrats ‘ready, willing and able’ to negotiate over shutdown
“What we will not do is support a partisan Republican spending bill that continues to gut the health care of the American people,” Democratic House Leader Hakeem Jeffries said at the Capitol.
Ahead of the White House meeting, he said his “line in the sand” is a package that helps Americans staring down potentially massive health care insurance rate hikes and Medicaid cuts from the GOP-led Congress.
“We’re not going to simply go along to get along,” he said.
Trump wants 100% import tax on movies made outside of US
Trump has little love for foreign cinema, saying the movie business “has been stolen” from Hollywood and the United States.
“Therefore, in order to solve this long time, never ending problem, I will be imposing a 100% Tariff on any and all movies that are made outside of the United States,” Trump posted on Truth Social.
It was unclear how these tariffs would operate, since movies and TV shows can be transmitted digitally without going through ports.
Nor was it clear what the legal basis would be for these import taxes. Trump has previously relied on national security grounds and an economic emergency in the form of trade deficits to justify his tariffs.
Thune says Democrats are holding government funding “hostage”

Sen. Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., speaks during a news conference after a policy luncheon at the Capitol, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)
Sen. Majority Leader John Thune argued that Democrats “are holding government funding hostage to a long list of partisan demands” in an opinion essay for the Washington Post.
The Senate Republican leader argued that the GOP’s proposed spending package was nonpartisan because it continues current federal spending levels.
Democratic leaders argue that the continuing resolution does not address some healthcare subsidies that would expire without intervention, among other things.
“If Democrats would only agree, we can pass the bill at any time and spare the American people all the problems that come with a government shutdown,” Thune stated.
Trump’s team keeps posting AI portraits of him. We keep clicking
Here he is, depicted at six months in office, chiseled and brawny, as mighty as the very nation.
Here he is as a Star Wars Jedi wielding a patriot-red lightsaber, rescuing our galaxy from the forces of evil.
Here he is taking over Gaza, transforming the strip into a luxury resort complete with a golden effigy of himself.
On Trump’s social media accounts and his second-term administration, a new official image of the president is emerging bit by bit: one generated artificially.
“It works both ways,” the Republican president said of AI-generated content at a news conference earlier this month. “If something happens that’s really bad, maybe I’ll have to just blame AI.”
▶ Read more about the Trump administration’s use of artificial intelligence
Trump says he’ll impose ‘substantial’ tariffs on furniture
By MICHELLE PRICE
Trump says he’ll impose ‘substantial’ tariffs on furniture
The president said in a social media post that the move was designed to help North Carolina’s furniture industry and it would make the state “GREAT again.”
Trump said “details to follow” including rates and when they’d take effect.
It was unclear if this was in addition to an announcement he made last week, when he said he would be imposing a 30% tariff on upholstered furniture starting Oct. 1.
White House urges Israel and Hamas to get to a ceasefire and hostage release deal
A display organized by Israeli activists depicts portraits of US President Donald Trump and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with an elongated nose, and a caption reading “Don’t be fooled again”.
Hours before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was set to meet Trump for talks, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt was urging both sides to finalize an agreement to bring an end to the nearly two-year war in Gaza.
“Nobody knows better than President Trump to reach a good deal, a reasonable deal for both sides, both sides have to give up a little bit and might leave the table a little bit unhappy,” Leavitt said in her appearance on “Fox & Friends.”
Jeffries condemns comments from Arizona state representative
“I condemn the hateful and vile threats made against Congresswoman Pramila Jayapal,” U.S. Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, the House Democratic minority leader, wrote in a statement.
The statement comes after John Gillette, a lawmaker in the Arizona state legislature, said last week that Jayapal should be “tried, convicted and hanged” after the progressive Washington Democrat urged supporters to organize against the Trump administration.
Congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle have called for an end to violent rhetoric against political opponents.

Trump threatens no federal funding for NYC if Mamdani wins
Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani speaks at the podium during the March on Wall Street, Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Heather Khalifa)
The president said Monday morning that New York City, his former home, “won’t be getting any” federal cash if frontrunner Zohran Mamdani is elected mayor.
“Remember, he needs the money from me, as President, in order to fulfill all of his FAKE Communist promises,” Trump wrote on social media.
“He won’t be getting any of it, so what’s the point of voting for him?”
White House: Michigan church attack suspect “hated people of the Mormon faith”
An ex-Marine smashed a pickup into a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints church in Michigan, opened fire and set the building ablaze during a crowded Sunday service and then was fatally shot by police. At least four people were killed and eight wounded, and authorities were searching the building ruins for more victims.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said federal authorities are still investigating Sunday’s deadly attack on the Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, house of worship that killed four and wounded eight.
But she said investigators are looking into possible animus by the suspect toward members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, widely known as the Mormon church.
Leavitt said she was briefed by FBI Director Kash Patel earlier Monday on the latest details of the investigation.
White House: Trump giving Dems ‘one last chance to be reasonable’
The White House is making its position ahead of Trump’s meeting with top congressional leaders clear.
“The president wants to keep the government open, he wants to keep the government funded,” press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Monday.
Trump, Leavitt said, “is giving Democrats one last chance to be reasonable today.”
Democrats are demanding health care provisions in exchange for supporting the short-term funding bill. Leavitt hinted that negotiations were possible independent of the shutdown fight.
Pentagon confirms 200 National Guard troops called to duty in Portland
Chief Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell says troops have been called into service immediately and will serve for 60 days “to protect U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other U.S. Government personnel who are performing Federal functions.”
The deployment is being made over the objections of state leaders and is similar to one last summer in Los Angeles, where protesters demonstrated against deportation operations.
But this deployment is on a much smaller scale.
Trump had announced on Saturday that he would send troops to Portland.
The state’s governor, Democrat Tina Kotek, said Sunday that she objected to the deployment in a conversation with the president.
Trump’s schedule, according to the White House
- 10:15 a.m. ET: Trump will sign an executive order
- 11 a.m.: Netanyahu will arrive at the White House
- 11:35 a.m.: Trump and Netanyahu will do a bilateral meeting
- Noon: Trump and Netanyahu will have lunch
- 1:15 p.m.: Trump and Netanyahu will host a joint news conference
- 3 p.m.: Trump will meet with congressional leaders about the impending government shutdown
- 5:30 p.m.: Trump will participate in an event for Gold Star families
Catch up on the latest headlines
By SARAH NAFFA