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Bernie Sanders thrills Coachella crowd with surprise appearance
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Algeria protests after consular official indicted in France
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Indonesia palm oil firms eye new markets as US trade war casts shadow
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Indonesia's horror movie industry rises from the grave
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Myanmar marks new year festival mourning quake losses
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Death toll in Dominican nightclub roof collapse hits 226
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Blues go back to forwards to turn around Super Rugby form
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Harvey Weinstein sex crimes retrial to begin Tuesday in NY
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Day: McIlroy worthy of Tiger and Jack if he wins Masters
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Ecuador votes in razor-close presidential runoff
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DeChambeau surges late to line up Masters showdown with McIlroy
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McIlroy eyes Masters win and Slam - 'I'll be able to handle it'
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World Expo opens in Japan in rocky times
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No.1 Scheffler grinds out level par on tough day at Masters
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Ecuador's presidential hopefuls face toxic brew of crime, unemployment
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Over 100 feared dead in Sudan paramilitary attacks in Darfur: UN
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Ex-ministers charged as probe into deadly club fire broadens
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Magisterial McIlroy leads midway through Masters third round
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Own goal helps Liga leaders Barca beat Leganes
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Svitolina seals Ukraine berth in BJK Cup Finals with Britain, Spain advancing
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Marc Marquez fires warning with MotoGP Qatar sprint victory
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McLaren's Piastri claims Bahrain pole as Norris, Verstappen struggle
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Serbian president holds nationalist rally to counter student demos
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Bayern fail to make most of Leverkusen slip with Dortmund draw
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Ailing Bolsonaro says he will 'probably' need surgery
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Arnautovic pushes Inter six points clear ahead of Bayern showdown
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Zach Johnson, 49, turns back time with 66 in Masters charge
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Sizzling start lifts McIlroy to Masters lead
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Abhishek plunders 141 as Hyderabad pull off second-highest IPL chase
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Serbian president holds nationalist counter-rally
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Arsenal held by Brentford as faint title hopes fade
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Arnautovic pushes Inter Milan six points clear in Serie A
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Belligerent Abhishek hits 141 as Hyderabad chase down 246 in IPL
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England 'put foot on Ireland's throat' in Women's Six Nations
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England survive Ireland scare in Women's Six Nations
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Serbia's Vucic holds rally for 'love of Serbia'
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Israel expanding Gaza offensive, seizes key corridor
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Monaco beat faltering Marseille to take second place in Ligue 1
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'Slow travel' start-up launches cross-Channel crossings by sail
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UK passes emergency law to save British Steel
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Alcaraz to face Italy's Musetti in Monte Carlo final
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Newcastle boss Howe admitted to hospital
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US exempts tech imports in tariff step back
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Masters winner to get $4.2 mn from $21 mn purse
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De Bruyne leads Man City comeback, Forest beaten by Everton
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Almeida claims Tour of the Basque Country with stage six triumph
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Toll hits 225, Dominican officials say all bodies returned to loved ones
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Leverkusen title hopes take hit in Union stalemate

Trump agenda faces reality check in Congress vote
US President Donald Trump's radical agenda on everything from immigration to tax reform faces a key reality test in Congress on Tuesday, where Republicans have only an ultra-thin majority and are struggling to agree on a budget.
Members of the lower house will vote on a resolution that would set the blueprint for the 2025 federal government budget, with $4.5 trillion for tax cuts and more than $1.5 trillion in spending cuts on the docket.
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson, a key Trump ally, has been working to corral his party's lawmakers to back the bill, which Democrats say will result in deep cuts to the Medicaid program that many lower-income US families rely on.
Johnson has been pressured from both sides of his own party, too. A number of Republican lawmakers suggest the proposed cuts do not go deep enough, while others are focused on stopping the ever-growing US national debt, and some worry about possible impacts on Medicaid.
Republicans across the country faced opposition to the resolution in its current form at town halls in their constituencies last week, US media reported, with most protests focusing on cuts to social welfare programs.
Trump's party has only a one-seat majority in the House, and the bill would require either every Republican member to vote for it, or for some Democrat members to flip.
On Monday, Johnson conceded that he would likely need to find help from across the aisle.
"There may be more than one," he said, referring to Republicans opposed to the bill. "But they'll get there.... It is very high stakes."
- 'Their responsibility' -
Looming over Tuesday's debate is the March 14 deadline for Congress to agree a budget proposal outline or face yet another US government shutdown.
For Democrats, this is test of their willingness to play hardball. So far, they are indicating they will refuse to bail out their opponents.
"The Republicans have the House, the Senate and the presidency," House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries told CNN. "It is their responsibility to fund the government."
One of the Democratic demands is an assurance that funding approved by Congress is actually spent -- rather than being put on the chopping block by Trump's controversial billionaire adviser Elon Musk, whose so-called Department of Government Efficiency is seeking to slash through the entire US budget.
Republicans, however, have shown no sign of willingness to limit Trump's power, with some even seeking to codify Musk's cuts.
- 'Big beautiful bill' -
Ultimately, the debate on the resolution boils down to where the more than $1.5 trillion in cuts that will fund Trump's tax cuts and his signature programs will come from.
With the resolution in its current form, Republicans appear set to have to make huge cuts to Medicaid and other social safety net programs, including food stamps if they want to fund Trump's tax cuts.
Such a move would put Republican lawmakers in politically vulnerable districts in a weaker position for the midterm elections, due in two years.
Johnson, however, has suggested a different approach: factoring Musk's spending cuts and revenue earned from Trump's rash of trade tariffs into the budget to address the deficit.
"We have new revenue inputs that really ought to be factored into this," he said at a forum on Monday.
Last week, the Senate -- where Republicans hold a slim majority -- passed a competing budget blueprint that does not include Trump's tax cuts, with leaders saying they would vote on those separately later in the year.
Trump, however, has pushed for "one big beautiful bill" to come from the House, as outlined in Tuesday's resolution.
N.Esteves--PC