Trump, New York and Washington
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If Zohran Mamdani wins the New York City mayoral election in November, he may discover what his predecessors did — mayoralty is a graveyard for political careers.
As food costs climb and public trust in private solutions falters, a government-supported grocery model is moving from fringe idea to policy experiment.
New York’s state budget will take a $3 billion hit next year from President Donald Trump’s tax and spending bill, a top state official said Thursday.
Health care cuts are a far steeper hill to climb. The state’s Essential Plan, which covers roughly 1.6 million low-income New Yorkers who are ineligible for Medicaid, relies on billions of dollars in federal funding that will start drying up in January under the megabill.
The “Super Bowl Era” uniforms and helmet “pay homage to the franchise’s most successful period, on the 93rd anniversary of the team’s inception,” according to a
The federal budget bill signed by President Donald Trump will cost New York billions per year in healthcare funds and is expected to reduce enrollment in its government-run health plans by hundreds of thousands.
Washington told reporters that while nothing has been decided as of yet, there will assuredly be changes to the state’s fiscal plan to accommodate changes to federally funded social service programs like Medicaid and the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.
Donald Trump is doing a lot. The president of the United States threw political gasoline on two of America’s biggest cities, floating the idea of federal takeovers of New York City and Washington D.C. On top of that, he called mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani out of his name, among other things.